The objective of this study was to assess ovarian activity in a cohort of aged female rhesus macaques. Menstrual records for 26 rhesus macaques ages 20-29 yr were evaluated over a 1-yr period, and daily urinary estrone conjugate (E1C) and pregnanediol-3-glucuronide (Hygeia [Hy]-PdG) levels were determined for 12 wk. Each animal was categorized as either pre-, peri-, or postmenopausal based on menstrual and hormonal data. Eleven animals (mean age 22.5 yr) were premenopausal, thirteen (mean age 24 yr) were perimenopausal, and two (mean age 29.5 yr) were postmenopausal. Hormone profiles for perimenopausal animals reveal prolonged follicular phases and/or a lack of patterned Hy-PdG dynamics. Breakthrough bleeding occurred in four of these perimenopausal animals. The postmenopausal animals were amenorrheic and exhibited low E1C levels (less than 10 ng/mg creatinine). The results of this study illustrate that the decline of ovarian function in female macaques during the third decade of life parallels the menstrual and hormonal events associated with the climacteric in women, and that menopause does occur in rhesus macaques.
A simple method for extracting ovarian steroids from feces is presented, together with enzyme immunoassay systems for measuring estrogen and progesterone metabolites. Small amounts of feces were combined in a 1:10 proportion with a modified phosphate buffer, shaken for 24 h, centrifuged, and decanted; the supernatant was directly measured for estrogen and progesterone metabolites by enzyme immunoassays. Serum estradiol and progesterone profiles were compared to urinary and fecal profiles in the same animals to determine the degree to which each reflected the ovarian events detectable in serum. The correlation coefficients for the relationship between serum, urinary, and fecal hormones for individual animal cycles were found to be statistically significant in every case but one, where the relationship between serum estradiol and urinary estrone conjugates was not significant. Urinary and fecal measurements were used to determine whether estrogen and progesterone metabolism and excretion varied within and between animals. Variation in unconjugated estrogen and progesterone metabolites was observed in the follicular phase, the luteal phase, and early pregnancy.
The study presented characterizes the ovarian and pituitary function of the aged female macaque through a complete annual reproductive cycle to compare hormone dynamics during the human and nonhuman primate menopausal transition. Data collected over an entire year from aged macaque females indicated that urinary FSHbeta subunit baseline levels statistically significantly increased in females after age-related abnormal menstrual cycles occurred. These abnormal cycles were followed by anovulation and complete cessation of follicular activity. No statistically significant difference in urinary FSHbeta subunit levels was seen between females that exhibited year-round normal ovarian cycles and those that exhibited seasonal ovarian cycles followed by an interval of anovulation during the nonbreeding season. Basal urinary estrogen metabolite levels were not observed to decrease until ovarian cycles became abnormal and FSHbeta subunit levels began to rise. Early follicular phase circulating inhibin beta levels were statistically significantly reduced only when ovariectomized females were compared to the year-round normally cycling females. A statistically nonsignificant trend toward decreased inhibin secretion, however, was apparent in aged females with normal cycles, aged females with abnormal cycles, anovulatory aged females, and finally, ovariectomized females. Whereas decreased circulating levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate showed a general decline over the 1-yr study period in all groups, they were lowest in the year-round normally cycling group, progressively higher in the normal-to-anovulatory group and abnormal-to-anovulatory group, and highest in the anovulatory group. Finally, the nonbreeding season was associated with the highest number of abnormal cycles, suggesting that onset of complete ovarian senescence in these study macaques was more likely to occur during that time (i.e., females were less likely to return to normal ovarian cycles the following breeding season and more likely to exhibit permanent ovarian quiescence).
Paired urine and serum samples from four conceptive and six nonconceptive ovarian cycles of seven adult Macaca mulatta were analyzed by radioimmunoassay (RIA) for circulating estradiol (E,) and progesterone (Po), and urinary estrone conjugates (E,C) and immunoreactive preganediol-3-glucuronide (iPDG) using enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Nonconceptive cycles exhibited a fivefold increase in urinary E,C and serum E2 levels from follicular phase levels to the preovulatory peak. Linear correlation between urinary E,C and serum E, nonconceptive cycle hormone levels was significant (RO.01, r = 0.69). Luteal phase levels of iPDG and serum Po levels were approximately parallel in nonconceptive cycles. Similarly, conceptive cycle urinary E,C levels and serum E, measurements had a correlation coefficient that was significant (P
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