1. An increase in serum lipids increases luteal lipid content and alters the disappearance rate of progesterone in cows.
- Author
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Hawkins DE, Niswender KD, Oss GM, Moeller CL, Odde KG, Sawyer HR, and Niswender GD
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle blood, Cholesterol blood, Corpus Luteum cytology, Corpus Luteum ultrastructure, Female, Labor, Obstetric, Lipoproteins, HDL blood, Lipoproteins, LDL blood, Microscopy, Electron veterinary, Ovariectomy veterinary, Pregnancy, Cattle metabolism, Corpus Luteum metabolism, Lipid Metabolism, Lipids blood, Progesterone blood
- Abstract
To determine whether an increase in serum lipids alters the area occupied by lipid droplets in steroidogenic luteal cells and(or) clearance rates of progesterone from serum, pregnant beef heifers received control (n = 6) or treatment (n = 5) diets. To increase serum lipids, the treatment diet contained calcium soaps of fatty acids. Control and treatment diets were formulated to be isocaloric and isonitrogenous. Feeding of diets was initiated approximately 100 d before parturition and continued through the third postpartum estrous cycle. On d 12 or 13 of the third postpartum cycle, corpora lutea were collected by ovariectomy and a center slice was processed for electron microscopy. Eight samples from each slice were sectioned, stained, and examined at a magnification of 2,500x. Five micrographs per sample were analyzed for area occupied by small (SLC) and large (LLC) luteal cells, percentage of the area of each steroidogenic cell type occupied by lipid, and total steroidogenic area (SLC + LLC) occupied by lipid. Jugular blood was collected before and after ovariectomy, and progesterone, cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) were quantified. Cows consuming treatment diets had approximately twice (P < .05) the concentration of cholesterol, HDL, and progesterone in serum that controls had. The percentage of the area of SLC, LLC, and total area occupied by lipid was greater (P < .05) in treated than in control cows. The average time required for serum concentrations of progesterone to decrease by 50% after ovariectomy was greater (P < .05) in treated than in control cows (170 +/- 16 vs 113 +/- 15 min).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1995
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