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Comparison of Steroidogenic and Ovulation-Inducing Effects of Orthosteric and Allosteric Agonists of Luteinizing Hormone/Chorionic Gonadotropin Receptor in Immature Female Rats

К. В. Деркач, I. A. Lebedev, I. Yu. Morina, A. A. Bakhtyukov, A. S. Pechalnova, V. N. Sorokoumov, Veronica S. Kuznetsova, И. В. Романова, А. О. Шпаков

2023International Journal of Molecular Sciences12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gonadotropins, including human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), are used to induce ovulation, but they have a number of side effects, including ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). A possible alternative is allosteric luteinizing hormone (LH)/hCG receptor agonists, including the compound TP4/2 we developed, which remains active when administered orally. The aim was to study the effectiveness of TP4/2 (orally, 40 mg/kg) as an ovulation inducer in FSH-stimulated immature female rats, compared with hCG (s.c., 15 IU/rat). TP4/2 stimulated progesterone production and corpus luteum formation; time-dependently increased the ovarian expression of steroidogenic genes (Star, Cyp11a1, Cyp17a1) and genes involved in ovulation regulation (Adamts-1, Cox-2, Egr-1, Mt-1); and increased the content of metalloproteinase ADAMTS-1 in the ovaries. These effects were similar to those of hCG, although in some cases they were less pronounced. TP4/2, in contrast to hCG, maintained normal LH levels and increased the ovarian expression of the LH/hCG receptor gene, indicating preservation of ovarian sensitivity to LH, and did not cause a sustained increase in expression of vascular endothelial growth factor-A involved in OHSS. Thus, TP4/2 is an effective ovulation inducer that, unlike hCG, has a lower risk of OHSS and ovarian LH resistance due to its moderate stimulating effect on steroidogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

Human chorionic gonadotropinLuteinizing hormoneInternal medicineOvulationEndocrinologyCorpus luteumGonadotropinOvarian hyperstimulation syndromeCholesterol side-chain cleavage enzymeBiologySteroidogenic acute regulatory proteinChemistryHormoneMedicineGene expressionIn vitro fertilisationPregnancyCytochrome P450GeneGeneticsBiochemistryMetabolismOvarian function and disordersReproductive Biology and FertilityHypothalamic control of reproductive hormones
Comparison of Steroidogenic and Ovulation-Inducing Effects of Orthosteric and Allosteric Agonists of Luteinizing Hormone/Chorionic Gonadotropin Receptor in Immature Female Rats | Litcius