Luteal phase ovarian oestrogen is not essential for implantation and maintenance of pregnancy from surrogate embryo transfer in the rhesus monkey

1994 
: The aim of this study was to investigate whether luteal phase ovarian oestrogen is required for blastocyst implantation and pregnancy maintenance in the rhesus monkey. Preimplantation embryos were retrieved from naturally ovulated, mated embryo donor monkeys. In group I, developmentally normal, age- and stage-matched embryos were transferred to recipient monkeys showing naturally synchronized ovulatory cycles. Immediately prior to embryo transfer, recipients were subjected to bilateral ovariectomy, and following transfer they were treated with i.m. injections of either progesterone (group Ia, n = 4), or oestradiol + progesterone (group Ib, n = 2). Recipient monkeys of group Ic (n = 4) were subjected to sham ovariectomy and vehicle injection. In group Ia, progesterone supplementation alone led to three pregnancies and live births. In group Ib, there was one live birth. In the control group Ic, four transfers resulted in two live births and one abortion on cycle day 58. Analysis of serum progesterone and oestradiol profiles showed that oestradiol had declined to undetectable levels within 3-5 days after ovariectomy in group Ia recipients, and the area under the curve of serum oestrogen concentrations during the peri-implantation period (days 10-20 after ovulation) were less (P < 0.001) in group Ia compared with group Ic. There were no changes in the area under the curve among serum progesterone concentrations in all the subgroups. In group II, long-term ovariectomized embryo recipients (n = 4) were primed with oestradiol till cycle day 11 of simulated transfer cycle, and received progesterone treatment from cycle day 10 till the end of the experiment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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