Abstract
Summary
Peripheral plasma progester-one concentrations were measured in New Zealand rabbits every 6 hr beginning 12 hr before and continuing until 96 hr after either natural mating, hCG injection, or saline injection. The number of ovulation points in naturally mated animals (9.3 ± 0.6, mean ± SE) was not significantly different from that in hCG-injected animals (8.6 ± 1.5). There was a surge in progesterone secretion following both mating and hCG injection. Plasma progesterone concentrations reached a peak prior to ovulation and then fell to basal levels at the time of ovulation. Beginning at approximately 30 hr after the ovulation-inducing stimulus, there was a progressive, significant (P < 0.001) increase in plasma progesterone concentration, which continued for the duration of the sampling period. The initiation of the postovulatory increase in progesterone secretion corresponds temporally with the movement of eggs from the ampullary-isthmic junction into the isthmus. The progressive increase in plasma progesterone between 30 and 72 hr after the induction of ovulation corresponds with the gradual movement of eggs through the isthmus into the uterus. The data suggest that movement of eggs through the oviductal isthmus is influenced by the postovulatory secretion of progesterone.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
