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Steroid secretion by cumulus cells isolated from human preovulatory follicles
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1985
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The secretion of progesterone, testosterone, and oestradiol by intact human oocyte-cumulus complexes in vitro was examined in incubations lasting 6-24 h. The complexes were aspirated from preovulatory follicles in 32 women who, due to tubal disease, were participating in an in vitro fertilization program. In 12 of the women follicular maturation was induced with clomiphene and human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), in 13 women with human menopausal gonadotrophin (hMG) and hCG and in 7 women with a combination of clomiphene-hMG plus hCG. The net secretion of steroids into the fertilization medium was studied before (0-6 h) and after (6-24 h) the addition of sperm, by RIA of aliquots removed at specific times. A high and sustained secretion of progesterone was found both before and after insemination. Testosterone secretion remained at a low and constant level while a net release of oestradiol was found mainly during the first hours of incubation. The release of steroids, particularly progesterone, varied according to the mode of hormonal stimulation in vivo and was highest in complexes from clomiphene-hMG-treated women, probably reflecting different maturity of the aspirated follicles. In a second series of experiments the dispersed cumulus cells were recovered after fertilization and cultured as monolayers for 2-4 days. The cells underwent spontaneous luteinization and secreted high amounts of progesterone. These results extend previous work in animals showing that also in the human the periovulatory cumulus cells are steroidogenically active. The results also suggest a functional difference in the cumulus cells related to the mode of ovulation induction.