School of BioSciences - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 8 of 8
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Steroid-independent regulation of uterine oxytocin receptors
    Siebel, AL ; Gehring, HM ; Parry, LJ (WILEY, 2004-04)
    The oxytocin receptor is an important contractile-associated protein, up-regulated at term in the myometrium in many mammalian species. We conducted studies in a novel animal model to challenge the general view that gonadal steroids are a major regulatory factor of uterine oxytocin receptors. Female marsupials have separate uteri and, in monovular species such as the tammar wallaby, the conceptus is present in one uterus whereas the contralateral uterus is empty. A marked increase in myometrial oxytocin receptors occurs only in the gravid uterus. Fetectomy experiments demonstrated that local embryo-derived factors stimulate this gravid uterus-specific increase in oxytocin receptors, and that uterine distension is probably not a key component in this regulatory pathway. Unilateral ovariectomy has no significant effect on uterine oxytocin receptors, emphasizing the impact of the conceptus on oxytocin receptor regulation and the minimal influence of gonadal steroids on parturition in this species. Our data highlight that regulation of uterine oxytocin receptor expression is multifactorial, and does not necessarily rely on gonadal steroids.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Differential expression of mesotocin receptors in the uterus and ovary of the pregnant tammar wallaby
    Siebel, AL ; Bathgate, RAD ; Parry, LJ (BIO SCIENTIFICA LTD, 2005-05)
    Mesotocin, an oxytocin-like peptide, is released in highest concentrations during parturition in macropodid marsupials. In late pregnant wallabies, uterine sensitivity to mesotocin increases markedly in the myometrium of the gravid uterus. This coincides with a significant increase in myometrial mesotocin receptor concentrations 3-4 days before term. To date, there is no information on mesotocin receptor gene expression in female wallaby reproductive tissues. This study aimed to examine mesotocin receptor gene expression in the uterus and ovaries of pregnant tammar wallabies, and to localise mesotocin receptors within the uterus. An RT-PCR strategy produced a consensus nucleotide sequence of 834 bp, which encoded 278 amino acids of transmembrane domains I to VI. This protein sequence has approximately 80% homology with the bovine and rat oxytocin receptor exon 2 region. Only one mesotocin receptor was detected in the tammar genome. The myometrium and mammary gland both expressed a 4.1 kb mesotocin receptor gene transcript. Myometrial mesotocin receptor gene expression increased on day 22 of the 26-day gestation and was significantly higher in the gravid than the non-gravid uterus in late pregnancy. This pattern of mesotocin receptor gene expression paralleled mesotocin receptor concentrations. Mesotocin binding sites were localised only to the myometrium, the highest densities being observed in the gravid uterus. Finally, this study showed high expression of mesotocin receptors in the corpus luteum. The pattern of luteal mesotocin receptor expression differed from the myometrium, with a decrease in mesotocin receptors occurring on the day of expected births.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Inhibition of oxytocin receptor and estrogen receptor-α expression, but not relaxin receptors (LGR7), in the myometrium of late pregnant relaxin gene knockout mice
    Siebel, AL ; Gehring, HM ; Reytomas, IGT ; Parry, LJ (ENDOCRINE SOC, 2003-10-01)
    This study used relaxin (RLX) gene knockout mice (Rlx-/-) to investigate the effects of RLX on myometrial oxytocin receptor (OTR) and estrogen receptor (ER)-alpha gene expression in late gestation. We also characterized the temporal expression of the RLX receptor (LGR7) and demonstrated gene transcripts in the myometrium of Rlx+/+ and Rlx-/- mice. There was a significant (P < 0.05) decrease in myometrial LGR7 gene expression on d 17.5 and 18.5 post coitum (pc) compared with earlier stages of gestation, but no differences between Rlx+/+ and Rlx-/- mice. Myometrial OTR mRNA levels increased at the end of gestation in Rlx+/+ but not Rlx-/- mice. ERalpha gene expression was up-regulated on d 14.5 pc in Rlx+/+ mice, with mRNA levels remaining high throughout late gestation. In contrast, ERalpha mRNA levels were significantly lower in Rlx-/- mice on d 14.5 and 18.5 pc. These data show that the increases in myometrial OTR and ERalpha expression in late pregnant Rlx+/+ mice were attenuated in Rlx-/- mice. The effects of RLX on OTRs are probably mediated via activation of ERalpha. Finally, RLX receptor expression in the myometrium of Rlx-/- mice did not differ from wild-type mice, implying that RLX does not influence expression of its receptor.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Mechanisms of relaxin action in the reproductive tract -: Studies in the relaxin-deficient (Rlx-/-) mouse
    Parry, LJ ; McGuane, JT ; Gehring, HM ; Kostic, IGT ; Siebel, AL ; Sherwood, OD ; Fields, PA ; Steinetz, BG (NEW YORK ACAD SCIENCES, 2005)
    The major functions of relaxin (RLX) are associated with female reproductive tract physiology, namely, the regulation of biochemical processes involved in remodeling of extracellular matrix components in the cervix and vagina at term. Studies in RLX-deficient mice (Rlx-/-) demonstrate that although females give birth to live young without apparent dystocia, the pubic symphysis is not elongated, and they have abnormal cervical and vaginal morphology. The current study examined phenotypic differences in collagen, matrix metalloproteinases (MMP), and estrogen receptors (ERs) in the cervix and vagina of pregnant Rlx+/+ and Rlx-/- mice. Neither collagen nor TGFbeta1 mRNA levels in the cervix and vagina differed significantly between Rlx+/+ and Rlx-/- at any stage of gestation, except on gestation day 18.5, with an increase in alpha(1)-I collagen and TGFbeta1 expression in Rlx-/- mice. MMP gene expression was also increased in Rlx-/- mice, especially at term. Administration of recombinant H2 RLX (0.05 microg/microL/h) to Rlx-/- mice for 6 d from gestation day 12.5 caused a significant decrease in alpha1-I collagen and MMP-13 gene expression in the cervix and vagina, but it had no effect on TGFbeta1. There was also a significant reduction in ERbeta expression in RLX-treated Rlx-/- mice. Interestingly, RLX treatment caused a significant decrease in LGR7 expression in these reproductive tissues. In summary, these data show increases in MMP gene expression in Rlx-/- mice that are not correlated with changes in collagen expression. Furthermore, we report a novel ER phenotype in the cervix and vagina of Rlx-/- mice.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Oxytocin and estrogen receptor expression in the myometrium of pregnant relaxin-deficient (Rlx-/-) mice
    Siebel, AL ; Gehring, HM ; Vodstrcil, L ; Parry, LJ ; Sherwood, OD ; Fields, PA ; Steinetz, BG (NEW YORK ACAD SCIENCES, 2005)
    Relaxin decreases oxytocin-stimulated rat myometrial contractions in vitro. This study used pregnant relaxin-deficient (Rlx-/-) mice to investigate the interaction between relaxin, oxytocin receptor (OTR), and estrogen receptor (ER) expression in the myometrium. Myometrial OTRs were significantly decreased on gestation day 18.5 in Rlx-/- mice than in Rlx+/+ mice. An increase in ERalpha in Rlx+/+ mice at term was correlated with a decrease in ERbeta, which was not observed in Rlx-/- mice. Treatment of Rlx-/- mice with relaxin had no effect on OTR, LGR7, or ERalpha expression, but it caused a significant decrease in ERbetas.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Purification and characterization of relaxin from the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii):: Bioactivity and expression in the corpus luteum
    Bathgate, RAD ; Siebel, AL ; Tovote, P ; Claasz, A ; Macris, M ; Tregear, GW ; Parry, LJ (SOC STUDY REPRODUCTION, 2002-07)
    The objective of this study was to isolate and purify prorelaxin or mature relaxin from the tammar wallaby corpus luteum (CL), determine their structure and bioactivity, and test the hypothesis that enzymatic cleavage of prorelaxin occurs in late gestation. Tammar relaxin peptides were extracted from pooled corpora lutea of late pregnant tammars using a combination of HPLC methods, and they were identified using Western blotting with a human (H2) relaxin antisera and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. Although no prorelaxin was identified, multiple 6-kDa peptides were detected, which corresponded to the predicted mature tammar relaxin amino acid sequence, with an A chain of 24 amino acids, and different B chain lengths of 28, 29, 30, and 32 amino acids. Tammar relaxin bound with high affinity to rat cortical relaxin receptors and stimulated cAMP production in the human monocytic cell line, THP-1, which expresses the relaxin receptor. Analysis of individual CL indicated that equivalent amounts of mature relaxin peptides were present throughout gestation and also in unmated tammars at equivalent stages of the luteal phase in the nonpregnant cycle. Immunoreactive relaxin was localized specifically to the luteal cells of the CL and the intensity of immunostaining did not vary between gestational stages. These data show that the CL of both pregnant and unmated tammar wallabies produces mature relaxin and suggests that relaxin expression in this species is not influenced by the conceptus. Moreover, the presence of mature relaxin throughout gestation implies that prohormone cleavage is not limited to the later stages of pregnancy
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Up-regulation of mesotocin receptors in the tammar wallaby myometrium is pregnancy-specific and independent of estrogen
    Siebel, AL ; Gehring, HM ; Nave, CD ; Bathgate, RAD ; Borchers, CE ; Parry, LJ (OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC, 2002-05)
    The oxytocin-like peptide of most Australian marsupials is mesotocin, which stimulates uterine contractions and is important for normal birth in the tammar wallaby. Female marsupials have two uteri and, in monovular species such as the tammar, one uterus is gravid with a single fetus, whereas the contralateral uterus is nongravid. A significant increase in myometrial mesotocin receptor concentrations occurs only in the gravid uterus on Day 23 of the 26-day gestation. This study examined whether or not mesotocin receptors are present in the myometrium and are up-regulated at the equivalent stage of the luteal phase in unmated tammars. In contrast to the marked increase in mesotocin receptor mRNA and protein concentrations in the myometrium of the gravid uterus during pregnancy, receptors did not increase in the unmated animals. There were also no significant differences between the two uteri, except on Day 27. Plasma profiles of peripheral estradiol-17beta and progesterone did not differ significantly between pregnant and nonpregnant cycles. However, progesterone concentrations were significantly lower on Day 1 postpartum compared with Day 27 of the nonpregnant cycle. In pregnant tammars, the molar ratio of circulating estradiol-17beta to progesterone increased significantly between Day 25 of gestation and 1 day postpartum, but was not correlated with an increase in mesotocin receptor concentrations in either uterus. The data confirm that a local fetal influence is more important than systemic factors, such as estrogen, in the regulation of uterine mesotocin receptors in the tammar wallaby.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Effects of fetectomy on oxytocin receptors in the myometrium of the tammar wallaby
    Siebel, AL ; Gehring, HM ; Parry, LJ (OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC, 2002-10)
    Mesotocin, an oxytocin-like peptide, stimulates uterine contractions during marsupial parturition. Female marsupials have two separate uteri, and in monovular species, the uterus with the conceptus is gravid, whereas the contralateral uterus is nongravid. Marsupials are unique because systemic and feto-placental factors in the regulation of uterine function can be differentiated. In pregnant tammar wallabies, a marked increase in myometrial mesotocin receptors (MTRs) occurs on Day 23 of the 26-day gestation, but only in the gravid uterus. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of removing the conceptus on this MTR up-regulation. Complete fetectomy on Day 20 of gestation resulted in significantly lower MTR mRNA and receptor concentrations on Day 23 compared with sham-operated controls. In contrast, there was no significant difference in MTR expression between controls and partially fetectomized animals in which uterine distension was maintained in the absence of a conceptus. In a related study, we examined MTRs in the myometrium of animals that appeared to be pregnant with a large, distended uterus. However, these uteri contained an abnormally developed fetus and avascular placenta. In these animals, MTR levels were significantly higher in the distended uterus compared with the nondistended uterus, and did not differ from controls. These data demonstrate that uterine occupancy is essential for the marked increase in uterine MTRs observed on Day 23 gestation. It also appears that distension may be one of the key factors involved.