| Literature DB >> 17008470 |
Hamish M Fraser1, Helen Wilson, Christine Wulff, John S Rudge, Stanley J Wiegand.
Abstract
The intense angiogenesis characteristic of early corpus luteum development is dependent upon vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as inhibitors of VEGF administered at the peri-ovulatory period suppress endothelial cell proliferation and progesterone secretion. We now report that administration of VEGF Trap, a soluble decoy receptor-based inhibitor, at the mid- or the late luteal phase in the marmoset results in a rapid decline in plasma progesterone. Since vascularisation of the corpus luteum is largely complete by the mid-luteal phase, it suggested that this functional luteolysis involved mechanisms other than inhibition of angiogenesis. A second experiment investigated the role of VEGF in maintaining the integrity of the luteal vasculature and hormone-producing cells. VEGF Trap was administered to marmosets in the mid-luteal phase and ovaries were obtained 1, 2, 4 or 8 days later for localisation of activated caspase-3 staining in the corpus luteum and compared with those obtained 2, 4 and 8 days after administration of control protein. The number of cells with activated caspase-3 staining was significantly increased after administration of VEGF Trap. Dual staining of activated caspase-3 with the endothelial cell marker CD31 showed that at 1 day post-treatment, more than 90% caspase-3-stained cells were vascular endothelium, prior to detection of an increasing incidence in death of hormone-producing cells on days 2 and 4. Staining with CD31 showed that the endothelial cell area was decreased after treatment. By 8 days after treatment, corpora lutea had regressed to varying degrees, while all control corpora lutea remained healthy. These results show that VEGF inhibition in the mid- or the late luteal phase induces functional luteolysis in the marmoset that is associated with premature and selective death of endothelial cells.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17008470 DOI: 10.1530/rep.1.01064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reproduction ISSN: 1470-1626 Impact factor: 3.906