To determine the changes in patterns of 17 beta-estradiol and progesterone levels underlying abnormal cycles in bitches immunized with solubilized crude porcine zonae pellucidae (cPZP), to attempt to circumvent these problems by immunizing with a purified zona fraction (pPZP), and to test the effectiveness of different adjuvants, bitches were immunized with cPZP or pPZP 2-6 times with no adjuvant, Freund's adjuvant, alum adjuvant, or the adjuvant CP-20,961. The bitch immunized without adjuvant had a low titer with a normal cycle and fertility. Immunization with cPZP and adjuvant produced moderate to high titers of antizona antibodies and infertility. Bitches with high titers experienced abnormal estrous cycles. Estradiol rose during proestrus, but instead of falling sharply in early estrus as in controls, it remained elevated. Progesterone did not rise. The moderate-titered bitches had normal cycles and steroid patterns. Bitches immunized with pPZP had moderate titers. Cycles were normal after 3 injections, but after 6 injections one bitch had an abnormal cycle. One pPZP-immunized bitch remained fertile but the others were infertile. Alum was the mildest adjuvant, causing no injection site lesions, but the highest titers occurred with Freund's and CP-20,961 adjuvants. All three adjuvants induced titers sufficient to inhibit fertility. Infertility in bitches immunized with PZP may be due to prevention of zona penetration, because their antisera inhibited zona penetration of oocytes by spermatozoa in vitro. However, alterations in ovarian function preventing ovulation and luteinization could be involved in high-titered bitches.
In this study the induction of the acrosome reaction of canine sperm by homologous zona pellucida (ZP) was examined. Twelve semen samples obtained from 6 normal beagle dogs were evaluated after sperm incubation in vitro with canine capacitation medium (CCM). Washed sperm were preincubated at 37 degrees C in 5% CO2 in air for 4 and 7 h prior to experimental treatment. Sperm were co-incubated for 1 min with intact oocytes collected from canine ovaries. Half of the oocytes were then fixed, and the bound sperm were assessed for acrosome reactions through use of a polyclonal antisperm antiserum and indirect immunofluorescence. The remaining oocytes were incubated in sperm-free medium for an additional 1-h period, and the acrosomal status of sperm bound to the ZP was evaluated similarly. The percentage of acrosome-reacted sperm on the ZP increased significantly during the 1-h incubation period. In other experiments, capacitated canine sperm were incubated with heat-solubilized ZP for 1 h and their acrosomal status was determined using fluoresceinated Pisum sativum lectin. The percentages of acrosome-reacted sperm increased significantly in ZP solution compared with controls. These data demonstrate that intact and solubilized canine ZP are capable of inducing acrosome reactions of canine sperm.
The ovarian histopathology of bitches immunized with crude (cPZP) or partially purified (pPZP) porcine zona pellucida proteins was examined in order to determine the cause of abnormal estrous cycles. The majority of immunized bitches had ovarian cytes. Those immunized with cPZP had follicular cysts lined with a thin layer of granulosa cells, while in those immunized with pPZP, the cysts were lined by a basement membrane with a clump of luteinized cells. In two bitches immunized with cPZP, oocytes were present only in primordial follicles. Similar abnormalities were not found in a bitch immunized with human serum albumin or in 12 untreated bitches. Oocytes flushed from the oviducts of mated, immunized bitches were degenerating, which may have been a primary cause of infertility in such bitches. Ovaries studied 2-6 weeks after immunization showed no loss of gap junctional communication between oocytes and granulosa cells, nor was any inflammatory reaction seen. IgG was bound to the zona as revealed by fluoresceinated protein A staining of frozen sections of those ovaries. Abnormal estrous cycles in PZP-immunized bitches appear to result from follicular dysgenesis or cyst formation, but the etiology of these conditions is unresolved.
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