Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (PBS)
9,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There were two related objectives in this study. The first was to determine the influence of endogenous relaxin on ovulation in rats. The second was to investigate the effect of relaxin on the secretion of gelatinases involved in extracellular matrix remodeling from rat ovarian cells. Immature rats were primed s.c. with 10 IU eCG; 51 to 52 h later, a monoclonal antibody specific for rat relaxin (MCAR), a control antibody against fluorescein (MCAF), or PBS vehicle was administered via intraovarian bursal injection under anesthesia, and 15 IU hCG was injected i.p. immediately thereafter. Rats were killed 26 h later, and oviducts were isolated and examined under the microscope to determine the number of ovulated oocytes. MCAR (0.25 and 2.5 micrograms/ovary) partially suppressed gonadotropin-induced ovulation as compared to the value for PBS controls. There was no significant difference in the number of ovulated oocytes between animals treated with MCAF and PBS controls. Also, porcine relaxin, given s.c. immediately after MCAR treatment, could reverse the inhibitory effect of MCAR on ovulation. To examine a possible mechanism for the effect of relaxin on ovulation, granulosa cells and theca-interstitial cells were obtained from ovaries of eCG-primed immature rats. The gelatinases secreted from cultured cells were analyzed using gelatin zymography and scanning densitometry. In the granulosa cell culture, relaxin increased the secretion of two major gelatinases of about 92 and 63 kDa in a dose-and time-dependent manner within 24 h of treatment. In the theca-interstitial cell culture, relaxin induced dose- and time-dependent increases in the secretion of two other major gelatinases of about 76 and 71 kDa. These gelatinases were characterized as metalloproteinases but not serine/cysteine proteinases. Furthermore, an immunoblot study demonstrated that relaxin stimulated the secretion of a 72-kDa type IV collagenase-like substance from cultured theca-interstitial cells but not from granulosa cells. This study demonstrates several original findings. First, endogenous relaxin may facilitate the ovulatory process in rats. Second, exogenous relaxin exhibits a biological effect on cultured rat theca-interstitial cells in addition to granulosa cells. Third, exogenous relaxin regulates the secretion of different major forms of gelantinases from cultured rat granulosa cells and theca-interstitial cells. The study supports the idea that relaxin may play an autocrine/paracrine role that is involved in modulating ovarian function.
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PMID:Relaxin modulates the ovulatory process and increases secretion of different gelatinases from granulosa and theca-interstitial cells in rats. 894 84

This study employed morphometric analysis to evaluate changes in the histological characteristics that accompany relaxin-induced growth and softening of the vagina during the second half of rat pregnancy. There were three treatment groups (N = 4/group). Five milligrams of a monoclonal antibody for rat relaxin, designated MCA1, were injected i.v. daily on days 12-21 of gestation to treatment group MCA1. Control groups received either 5 mg of monoclonal antibody for fluorescein (MCAF; monoclonal antibody control) or 0.5 ml PBS (vehicle control). Vaginas were removed on day 22 of pregnancy, fixed in 10% neutral-buffered formalin, and embedded in paraffin. Tissue sections (5 microm) were stained with Gomori's trichrome to visualize collagen, or orcein to visualize elastin. Measurements were performed with a light microscope equipped with a video camera connected to a computer. Within the vaginal stroma, the density of collagen fiber bundles was lower, the length of elastin fibers was shorter, and the cross-sectional area and wall thickness of arteries were greater in relaxin-replete control rats than in relaxin-deficient MCA1-treated rats. These relaxin-induced changes in the stroma appear to account, at least in part, for the hormone's softening effect on the vagina. Within the epithelium, there were approximately 2-fold more basal and mucus-secreting cells in relaxin-replete control rats than in MCA1-treated rats. The relaxin-induced accumulation of epithelial cells appears to contribute to vaginal growth. We conclude that relaxin plays a role in preparing the vagina as well as the cervix for rapid and safe delivery in pregnant rats.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibodies specific for rat relaxin. X. Endogenous relaxin induces changes in the histological characteristics of the rat vagina during the second half of pregnancy. 979 85