Literature DB >> 9642790

Ovarian growth and folliculogenesis in breeding and nonbreeding females of a social rodent, the Zambian common mole-rat, Cryptomys sp.

W J Willingstorfer1, H Burda, J Winckler.   

Abstract

Zambian common mole-rats are subterranean rodents that live in families with only one female breeding. Her offspring remain in the parental nest and do not reproduce. Behavioral experiments (Burda, '95) demonstrated that their apparent "sterility" is based on incest avoidance and individual recognition of family members. To elucidate whether some kind of morphologically apparent ovarian suppression still takes place in daughters, ovaries of females of known age, weight, and reproductive histories were examined histologically and morphometrically. The body mass of old females (more than 3 years of age) begins to decrease, and the ovaries seem to begin to atrophy at the age of about 3-6 years. Ovaries in neonates exhibited primordial and primary follicles, sometimes clustered in nests. Ovaries of adult nonbreeding females expressed all stages of the follicular development up to tertiary follicles. Many unruptured luteinized follicles were present, but true corpora lutea as a morphological sign of ovulation were missing. Unruptured luteinized follicles also could be found (additionally to true corpora lutea) in ovaries of breeding females. The number of primordial follicles dropped rapidly during the first 2 years of age; the number of primary, secondary, and tertiary follicles was subject to individual variation; and there was no clear correlation with age or reproductive status. While a tendency to form accessory unruptured luteinized follicles may just reflect taxonomic affinities of bathyergids to hystricomorphs, the otherwise complete folliculogenesis in "sterile" daughters and the presence of unruptured luteinized follicles even in breeding females are further evidence that there is no hormonal suppression of the ovarial cycle. We suggest that ovulation in nonbreeding females is not actively suppressed by the breeding female, but instead that it is not released because the triggering mechanisms, most probably repeated copulation, are missing.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9642790     DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199807)237:1<33::AID-JMOR3>3.0.CO;2-P

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Morphol        ISSN: 0022-2887            Impact factor:   1.804


  2 in total

1.  Achieving full-term pregnancy in the vizcacha relies on a reboot of luteal steroidogenesis in mid-gestation (Lagostomus maximus, Rodentia).

Authors:  Santiago Andrés Cortasa; Pablo Felipe Ignacio Inserra; Sofía Proietto; María Clara Corso; Alejandro Raúl Schmidt; Alfredo Daniel Vitullo; Verónica Berta Dorfman; Julia Halperin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 3.752

2.  Non-Breeding Eusocial Mole-Rats Produce Viable Sperm--Spermiogram and Functional Testicular Morphology of Fukomys anselli.

Authors:  Angelica Garcia Montero; Christiane Vole; Hynek Burda; Erich Pascal Malkemper; Susanne Holtze; Michaela Morhart; Joseph Saragusty; Thomas B Hildebrandt; Sabine Begall
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-03-02       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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