We investigated the contribution of neutrophils to prostaglandin (PG)F(2 alpha)-induced luteolysis and the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as potential mediators of neutrophil accumulation in regressing corpora lutea of superovulated rats. On day 8 of pseudopregnancy, subcutaneous injection of PGF(2 alpha) (500 microg) significantly increased rhodamine 6G-labeled leukocyte adhesion in luteal venules, as observed by intravital microscopy. Neutrophil accumulation was confirmed by significantly increased myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity. Pretreatment with anti-leukocyte antibody (CD18-directed monoclonal antibody, WT-3) significantly inhibited the PGF(2 alpha)-induced increases in adherent leukocytes and MPO activity. Anti-leukocyte antibody also maintained serum progesterone concentrations. Pretreatment with oxygen free radical scavengers, superoxide dismutase (50,000 U/kg) and catalase (90,000 U/kg), also attenuated these PGF(2 alpha)-induced alterations. Corpora lutea preloaded with dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester, a fluorescent indicator for determining intracellular ROS generation, exhibited an increase in fluorescence after PGF(2 alpha) treatment. These findings suggest that leukocyte-endothelium interactions mediated by ROS generation are important in PGF(2 alpha)-induced luteolysis in rats.