Accumulating evidence has shown the ovary of mammals to contain an intrinsic renin-angiotensin system that has been ascribed an autocrine-paracrine role. The present study in the female rabbit ovary investigated the putative in vitro action of angiotensin II (A II) on basal and gonadotropin-induced steroidogenesis. Ovarian follicles from immature female rabbits treated with pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) were dissected out and a complete separation of the theca interna from the granulosa layer was performed, to demonstrate that A II affects separately the two individual cellular components of the follicular wall. We could show that theca is a source of estradiol whose production under human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) stimulation was reduced by A II. At the same time, A II increased the in vitro hCG-stimulated secretion of testosterone by theca. In granulosa, A II decreased hCG-stimulated aromatization of androstenedione to estradiol but did not alter the release of hCG-stimulated progesterone production. These results suggest that A II could induce locally an increase in follicular fluid androgen/estrogen ratio and possibly participate in causing atresia.
The aim of the present study was to analyse the tissuespecific expression of various promoter-derived transcripts from the gene encoding rabbit aromatase cytochrome P450. A new promoter, named I.r, was identified, and promoters II and I.r were sequenced. Promoter I.r-derived transcripts were found in preovulatory granulosa cells, corpus luteum, placenta and adipose tissue. An alternative splice variant of this transcript was found with tissue-specific preference. Tissue-specific expression of promoter-derived variants was studied in the ovary before and after ovulation. While the level of promoter II-derived transcript decreased dramatically after ovulation, that of promoter I.r-derived transcript remained unchanged, indicating that promoter II and promoter I.r were not controlled by a single regulation system. The existence of this dual system of regulation suggests that the rabbit ovary could be a useful model to study the promoter-specific regulation of aromatase.
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