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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 263: E158-E167, 1992;
0193-1849/92 $5.00
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AJP - Endocrinology and Metabolism, Vol 263, Issue 1 E158-E167, Copyright © 1992 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Endothelin in rabbit uterus during pregnancy

A. Peri, G. B. Vannelli, G. Fantoni, S. Giannini, T. Barni, C. Orlando, M. Serio and M. Maggi
Department of Human Anatomy and Histology, University of Florence, Italy.

Specific immunostaining for endothelin-1 (ET-1) was observed in the uterine mucosa of pregnant and nonpregnant rabbits. During gestation, giant cells immunopositive for ET-1 were identified in either endometrium or myometrium. In the latter, they were located in close proximity to the muscular fibers. High-affinity (dissociation constant = 0.25 nM) high-capacity [maximal binding (Bmax) = 7 pmol/mg protein] receptors for ET-1 were present in myometrial membranes of estrous rabbits. During pregnancy the concentration of ET-1 receptors progressively decreased (Bmax on day 29 = 4 pmol/mg protein), rising again at the time of spontaneous delivery. Conversely, ET-1 receptors in the aorta did not change during pregnancy and parturition. The presence of giant cells immunopositive for ET-1 in close proximity to the myometrial cells, together with the evidence of an increase in ET-1 receptors in myometrium of parturient rabbits, suggests a paracrine role for endometrial ET-1 during delivery. Because we previously demonstrated that oxytocin releases ET-1 from endometrial cells in primary culture and that endometrial and myometrial oxytocin receptors abruptly rise at the time of parturition, we propose that ET-1 might participate in the complex cell-to-cell interactions that occur during labor.


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