15-keto-13-14-dihydroprostaglandin-f2alpha has been researched along with estrone-sulfate* in 16 studies
16 other study(ies) available for 15-keto-13-14-dihydroprostaglandin-f2alpha and estrone-sulfate
Article | Year |
---|---|
Relationship between the somatic cell count in milk and reproductive function in peripartum dairy cows.
The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of the somatic cell count (SCC) in milk on reproductive performance, such as pregnancy status in the prepartum period and ovarian function in the postpartum period, in dairy cows. Blood samples were collected every week from one month prepartum to parturition in order to measure the concentrations of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2α (PGFM), estrone sulfate (E1S) and progesterone. Milk samples were collected three times per week in both the prepartum (for one month before the dry period) and postpartum periods (for 3 months immediately after parturition) to measure the SCC. Progesterone was also determined in the whole milk of postpartum cows to define the day of the first ovulation. In the prepartum period, the maximum SCC negatively correlated with the pregnancy period (r = -0.77), but not the calf birth weight. Positive and negative correlations were observed between the average SCC and PGFM or progesterone concentrations in plasma, respectively (r = 0.84 or -0.92, respectively), at 39 weeks of pregnancy. In the postpartum period, a correlation was observed between the day of the first ovulation and both the average and maximum SCC (r = -0.74 and -0.75, respectively), whereas days open was not related to the SCC. These results suggest that a high SCC in the prepartum period may advance parturition by increasing PGF2α and decreasing progesterone and that the first ovulation in the postpartum period was affected by a high SCC. Topics: Animals; Cattle; Cell Count; Dinoprost; Estrone; Female; Milk; Ovary; Postpartum Period; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Progesterone; Reproduction | 2014 |
The impact of induced stress during days 13 and 14 of pregnancy on the composition of allantoic fluid and conceptus development in sows.
Stress due to regrouping of breeding females is difficult to avoid completely in loose-housing systems. The effects of stress during the maternal recognition of pregnancy on fetal development and survival at Day 30 of pregnancy was, therefore, studied in 17 sows allocated into one control (C-) group, one group deprived of food during Days 13 and 14 (FD-), and one group (A-), which was treated with ACTH (0.01 mg/kg body weight of Synacthen Depot) every sixth hour during the same period. Total number of fetuses, fetal survival rate, volume of allantoic fluid, and the weight and length of total fetal unit, placentas, allantochorion and fetuses were determined. The concentrations of progesterone (P4), PGFM, PGF2, PGE, estrone-sulfate, and estradiol-17beta in the allantoic fluid were analyzed. No significant differences between groups were found for any parameter measured except for P4. Food deprivation increased P4 concentration in the allantoic fluid, and there was a positive correlation between the P4 concentration and the weight of the placenta. It is, therefore, suggested that P4 influences the placenta size among food-deprived sows. Topics: Allantois; Animals; Body Fluids; Dinoprost; Embryonic and Fetal Development; Estradiol; Estrone; Female; Fetal Weight; Gestational Age; Organ Size; Placenta; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications; Progesterone; Prostaglandins E; Stress, Physiological; Swine; Swine Diseases | 2004 |
Administration of recombinant porcine somatotropin (rpST) changes hormone and metabolic status during early pregnancy.
The objective of this study was to examine the effects of somatotropin (ST) on porcine reproductive and metabolic statuses during early pregnancy. Four pregnant crossbred gilts received 6 mg of recombinant porcine somatotropin (rpST) daily from days 10 to 27 after artificial insemination while six pregnant gilts served as controls. Blood samples were taken on days 8, 10, 12, 14, 18, 22, and 27 prior to rpST injections (8:00 h) and subsequently at 9:00, 10:00, 12:00, 14:00, 16:00, 18:00, and 20:00 h. On all remaining days of treatment, samples were taken once daily before injections (8:00 h). The samples were assayed for the metabolic hormones: ST, insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), insulin, thyroxine (T(4)), triiodothyronine (T(3)), and cortisol; for metabolites: free fatty acids (FFA) and glucose; and for the reproductive hormones: luteinizing hormone (LH), progesterone, estradiol-17beta, estrone sulfate, and prostaglandin F(2alpha). Delivery of rpST daily induced a 20- to 40-fold increase in plasma ST concentrations. Moreover, repeated administration of rpST resulted in a continuous increase in plasma IGF-I concentration (P < 0.001), from 191.0 +/- 22.3-340.0 +/- 15.3 ng/mL 24 h after initial injection to 591.3 +/- 46.8 ng/mL after final injections. Mean serum insulin tended to be greater in rpST-treated gilts. Blood concentrations of T(4) were reduced (P < 0.05) from day 14 of gestation in treated gilts while T(3) concentrations remained unchanged. Concentrations of both glucose and FFA were greater (P < 0.01) and cortisol concentrations were unchanged in treated gilts. Changes in reproductive steroid hormones were minimally affected. Circulating progesterone (P = 0.078), and estradiol-17beta (P = 0.087) concentrations tended to be lower in treated animals. These data show that treatment of pregnant gilts with rpST during early gestation mainly impacts metabolic rather than reproductive status. Topics: Adrenal Glands; Animals; Dinoprost; Estradiol; Estrone; Fallopian Tubes; Fatty Acids, Nonesterified; Female; Glucose; Growth Hormone; Hydrocortisone; Insulin; Insulin-Like Growth Factor I; Luteinizing Hormone; Male; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Progesterone; Receptors, Estrogen; Receptors, Progesterone; Swine; Thyroxine; Triiodothyronine; Uterus | 2002 |
Plasma concentrations of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha, progesterone, oestrone sulphate, oestradiol-17 beta and cortisol during late gestation, parturition and the early post partum period in llamas and alpacas.
Plasma concentrations of 15-ketodihydroprostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha, progesterone, oestrone sulphate, oestradiol-17 beta and cortisol during late gestation, parturition and the early post-partum period were measured in six llamas and five alpacas. During the last 100 days of pregnancy, 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha concentrations increased steadily until the day of parturition when a massive release was detected (P < 0.01) concomitant with a decrease in progesterone concentrations (P < 0.01). The highest PGF2 alpha metabolite concentrations (159 +/- 35 nmol l-1 and 92 +/- 29 nmol l-1 in llamas and alpacas respectively) were detected in the sample collected during the morning on the day of parturition. Basal concentrations were registered by day 3 after delivery. Plasma concentrations of oestrone sulphate started to increase 80 days before parturition and reached peak concentrations immediately before parturition (15 +/- 3 nmol l-1 in llamas and 18 +/- 5 nmol l-1 in alpacas). Oestrone sulphate concentrations dropped sharply (P < 0.01) on the day of parturition in llamas and one day later in alpacas, whereupon they remained relatively unchanged until at least 20 days postpartum. Oestradiol-17 beta concentrations were higher than 180 pmol l-1 during the last 45 days of pregnancy, began to decrease on the day of parturition and reached very low concentrations within the following two days. High oestradiol-17 beta concentrations were registered 7 days postpartum in all alpacas (P < 0.05) and within 10 days of parturition in five of six llamas (P < 0.01). No significant cortisol peaks were observed around parturition, but mean concentrations were increased in both species. Topics: Animals; Camelids, New World; Dinoprost; Estradiol; Estrogens; Estrone; Female; Gestational Age; Hydrocortisone; Labor, Obstetric; Postpartum Period; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Progesterone | 1998 |
Relationships of peri-partum, plasma concentrations of progesterone, oestrogens and 13,14-dihydro-15-ketoprostaglandin F2alpha in heifers and of anatomical measurements of dam and calf with difficulty of calving in early-bred Hereford x Friesian heifers.
Plasma concentrations of progesterone, oestradiol-17beta, oestrone, oestrone sulphate and PGFM have been measured daily during the first peri-partum period of 45 Hereford x Friesian heifers bred at 11 months of age. Anatomical measurements of dam and calf were also recorded. Twelve of the calvings were scored easy, 33 difficult. Each of five models (fitted by linear logistic regression) relating difficulty of calving to the hormonal and anatomical measurements, predicts with at least 94% accuracy the calving score (easy or difficult) among the calvings. The models predict that increases of progesterone concentration on the day before calving, of oestrone sulphate concentration on the day after calving and of heifer heart girth decrease the odds of difficult calving, whereas increases of heifer body length and of calf head circumference increase the odds of difficult calving. Topics: Animal Feed; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Body Weight; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Dinoprost; Dystocia; Estradiol; Estrogens; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Female; Insemination, Artificial; Labor, Obstetric; Logistic Models; Male; Multivariate Analysis; Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Radioimmunoassay | 1998 |
Effect of experimental infection with Listeria monocytogenes on the development of pregnancy and on concentrations of progesterone, oestrone sulphate and 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha in the goat.
The effect of Listeria monocytogenes infection on hormone levels in pregnant goats was studied. Four goats (Group I) received an intravenous inoculation of a bacterial culture (Type 1) on Days 69-77 and another four goats (Group II) received a similar inoculation on Days 105-106 of gestation. Five non-inoculated goats were used as controls. Plasma was analysed for progesterone, oestrone sulphate and 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha. The status of the foetus was followed using real-time ultrasonography. Three of the four goats in Group I aborted 8-10 days after inoculation. The fourth goat gave birth to a normal live kid at term. The three goats which aborted showed clinical signs of disease in connection with abortion. In Group II, all goats aborted after 9-11 days. All the goats showed clinical symptoms of disease from a few days after inoculation and the symptoms continued until abortion. The clinical symptoms of disease were more pronounced in Group II than in Group I. L. monocytogenes was isolated from all aborted foetuses. None of the control goats aborted. Ultrasound examination revealed foetal death either immediately before or up to 2 days before abortion. Mummification had begun in the foetus that had been dead for 2 days before expulsion. In comparison with pre-inoculation plasma levels in Group I, a significant decrease (P < 0.05) in progesterone levels and an increase in 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha levels were observed from Days 4 and 6 after inoculation, respectively. In Group II, a significant decrease (P < 0.05) in progesterone levels and an increase in 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha levels in plasma were observed from Days 8 and 6, respectively. The oestrone sulphate levels decreased slightly in the inoculated goats a few days before abortion. The pattern of changes in levels around abortion was similar to the pattern present in the control animals around parturition. However, oestrone sulphate levels did not increase in the inoculated groups before abortion in contrast to goats which delivered healthy kids. The changes in levels of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha in goats that aborted indicated that the endocrine foetal-placental function was disturbed, which was most likely due to the establishment and development of L. monocytogenes in the placenta and foetus. Topics: Animals; Dinoprost; Estrone; Female; Goats; Listeriosis; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Infectious; Progesterone | 1997 |
Patterns of hormone secretion throughout pregnancy in the one-humped camel (Camelus dromedarius).
Peripheral serum samples were collected from 8 pregnant dromedary camels and hormone secretion patterns were examined at specific time intervals. Mean serum progesterone concentrations began to rise 3-4 days after ovulation and remained reasonably constant at 3-5 ng mL-1 for the first 90-100 days of gestation. Concentrations then showed a definite fall, but thereafter remained constant again at 2-4 ng mL-1 throughout the rest of pregnancy. In contrast, serum oestrogen concentrations showed pronounced fluctuations during the first 100 days of gestation. Mean oestradiol-17 beta concentrations increased at around Day 50 to about 100 pg mL-1 and then remained relatively constant from Day 90 to Day 300. Mean oestrone sulfate concentrations, however, showed two definite peaks in early gestation, each reaching about 10 ng mL-1, with the first peak occurring around Day 25 and the second peak around Day 75. Oestrogen production then remained fairly constant until around Day 300, after which concentrations of both oestrone sulfate and free oestradiol-17 beta rose steeply over the next 80 days to reach mean peak values of 46 ng ML-1 and 518.7 pg mL-1, respectively, at the time of parturition. Concentrations of 13,14 dihydro-15-keto prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM) remained low and reasonably steady at 100-200 pg mL-1 during the first 320 days of pregnancy; thereafter, PGFM concentrations rose steeply over the next 50 days, before an explosive further increase to a peak of 1900 +/- 141 pg mL-1 mean +/- sem on the day of calving. These results suggest that, as in the cow, a major change in steroid synthetic capability and/or enzyme content of the placenta may occur at around 80% (Day 300) of gestation in the pregnant camel. Topics: Animals; Camelus; Dinoprost; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Estradiol; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Female; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Progesterone; Radioimmunoassay | 1996 |
Effect of Toxoplasma gondii infection on the development of pregnancy and on endocrine foetal-placental function in the goat.
The effect of Toxoplasma gondii inoculation on pregnancy and on endocrine foetal-placental function in pregnant goats was studied. Five susceptible goats were inoculated subcutaneously with T. gondii bradyzoites at 71 +/- 2 days of gestation. Another five goats were used as controls. Plasma was analysed for progesterone, oestrone sulphate and 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha. The condition of the foetuses was monitored by real-time ultrasonography. All inoculated goats aborted or delivered stillborn or weak kids 54-73 days after inoculation. None of the goats showed signs of general disease. In cases of foetal death, the ultrasound examination revealed that death occurred between day 1 and 12 before abortion or birth. The appearance of the foetuses varied from fresh to mummified, depending on the number of days between foetal death and expulsion. All five goats became serologically positive to T. gondii after inoculation. None of the goats used as controls aborted, but one goat delivered one mummified and one weak kid for unknown reasons. In inoculated animals an increase in 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha levels in plasma and a subsequent tendency to a decrease in oestrone sulphate levels were observed from about day 40 after inoculation and until abortion or birth. High levels of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha were seen after foetal death. High levels of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha were not always followed by a drop in progesterone levels. The mean level of progesterone was slightly decreased after inoculation and onwards. The pattern of progesterone levels around abortion in the inoculated goats was very similar to the pattern around parturition in the control goats. However, 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha levels were higher both before and after abortion in inoculated goats than in control goats. The level of oestrone sulphate did not increase in the inoculated group before abortion in contrast to the level in goats which delivered healthy kids. The patterns of changes in levels of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha and oestrone sulphate in inoculated animals indicate that the endocrine foetal-placental function was disturbed in most of the inoculated goats, probably due to the injury caused by the establishment and development of T. gondii infection in the placenta and foetus. Topics: Abortion, Veterinary; Animals; Dinoprost; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Female; Goat Diseases; Goats; Maternal-Fetal Exchange; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic; Progesterone; Time Factors; Toxoplasma; Toxoplasmosis, Animal | 1996 |
The effect of Toxoplasma gondii infection in flunixin meglumine treated pregnant ewes as monitored by plasma levels of 15-ketodihydroprostaglandin F2 alpha, progesterone, oestrone sulphate and ultrasound scanning.
The aim of this study was to examine the endocrinological response (15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha, progesterone and oestrone sulphate) of pregnant ewes which were constantly treated with flunixin meglumine (FM) after infection with Toxoplasma gondii. Seven Swedish Peltsheep ewes were dosed orally with 2,000 T. gondii oocysts at 90.5 (82-94) days of pregnancy. The ewes were treated with FM, 1 mg/kg, intramuscularly twice a day, starting one day before infection until the end of the gestation period. Further three ewes were treated with FM alone during the corresponding time of pregnancy. Another four ewes were used as uninfected and untreated controls. All infected ewes developed antibodies to T. gondii and aborted, but the FM treated control group and the non-treated control group, which remained seronegative, delivered the lambs in the normal gestation range. No early abortions (less than 10 days after infection) were seen in the infected group. The endocrinological changes reflected the pathological changes in the uterus and foetuses. FM could neither completely inhibit prostaglandin release during abortion nor the physiological change of the hormone before parturition even though it depressed prostaglandin release before abortion or parturition and eliminated fever. The infectious process caused by the organism was probably not affected. FM treatment alone had no observed negative effects on pregnant ewes and their foetuses. Topics: Animals; Clonixin; Dinoprost; Estrone; Female; Nicotinic Acids; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Toxoplasmosis, Animal; Ultrasonography | 1990 |
The effect of Toxoplasma gondii infection in unvaccinated and iscom-vaccinated pregnant ewes as monitored by plasma levels of 15-ketodihydroprostaglandin F2 alpha, progesterone, and oestrone sulphate.
In order to study the effect of Toxoplasma infection on hormonal levels in pregnant ewes, twenty-eight Scottish Blackface ewes were dosed orally with Toxoplasma gondii oocytes at 91 +/- 1 days of gestation. Fifteen of these ewes were vaccinated with an experimental Toxoplasma iscom vaccine prior to inoculation. Further three ewes were used as non-infected controls. All challenged ewes became infected. Plasma was analysed for the content of 15-ketodihydro-PGF2 alpha, progesterone and oestrone sulphate. The endocrinological changes appeared to reflect the pathological changes in the uterus. Infected animals tended to show an increase in the levels of the prostaglandin metabolite between two and eleven days after challenge, followed by a decrease in progesterone and later also of oestrone sulphate levels. Following the initial phase, the pattern was more variable but related to the outcome of gestation. There was a marked tendency towards more normal endocrinological patterns in the vaccinated animals in comparison to unvaccinated challenged ones. Topics: Adjuvants, Immunologic; Animals; Dinoprost; Estrone; Female; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Infectious; Progesterone; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Toxoplasmosis, Animal; Vaccination | 1990 |
Maintaining fetal normoglycemia prevents the increase in myometrial activity and uterine 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin F2 alpha production during food withdrawal in late pregnancy in the ewe.
Food deprivation during pregnancy leads to an increase in maternal and fetal prostaglandin (PG) production and increased uterine contractility. We investigated the effect of maintaining fetal normoglycemia during food withdrawal-induced maternal hypoglycemia on uterine 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM) production and myometrial activity in late pregnant sheep. Pregnant sheep were surgically instrumented with fetal and maternal catheters and electromyogram leads under halothane anesthesia. Maternal and fetal blood plasma samples were obtained once a day at 0900 h, 24 h before (baseline sample) and after 48 h of food withdrawal. Food, but not water, was withdrawn from ewes in group I (n = 5). During food withdrawal in group II (n = 5), glucose was infused into a fetal vein to maintain fetal normoglycemia. All data were normalized to the concentration in the baseline sample in each animal as 100%. After 48 h of food withdrawal, maternal whole blood glucose fell by 42.2 +/- 4.4% (mean +/- SEM: group I) and 31.4 +/- 6.2% (group II). These values were not significantly different. Fetal blood glucose fell by 40.4 +/- 5.7% (group I). In group II, fetal blood glucose was maintained in the normal range (99.6 +/- 1.6% of baseline). Maternal uterine electromyogram activity, uterine venous estrone sulfate, and uterine veno-arterial difference in PGFM rose significantly during food withdrawal in group I ewes, but not in group II ewes. Maternal and fetal arterial plasma ACTH and cortisol did not change in group II animals. We conclude that maintenance of fetal normoglycemia during 48 h of food withdrawal in sheep prevents the increase in myometrial activity, maternal plasma estrogens, and uterine PGFM production during food withdrawal in late pregnancy. Topics: Adrenocorticotropic Hormone; Animals; Blood Glucose; Dinoprost; Electromyography; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Fasting; Female; Fetal Blood; Hydrocortisone; Myometrium; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Sheep; Uterus | 1990 |
Flumethason-induced calving is preceded by a period of myometrial inhibition during luteolysis.
The temporal relationship among changes of the concentrations of the 13,14-dihydro-15-keto metabolite of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM), estrone (E1) and estrone sulphate (E1S) in maternal arterial plasma (MP) and amniotic fluid (AF), the prepartum progesterone (P4) decline in MP, and the evolution of uterine electromyographic (EMG) activity was investigated in 6 cows. Calving was induced by a single i.m. injection of 5 mg flumethason on Day 270 of gestation. The period under investigation was subdivided into four consecutive periods: Period 1 covered the last 2 days before flumethason treatment; Period 2 (mean +/- SEM duration: 16.1 +/- 2.5 h), Period 3 (8.8 +/- 1.1 h), and Period 4 (13.0 +/- 1.5 h) together included the interval between injection and the onset of the expulsive stage of induced parturition. Each was defined by its pattern of uterine EMG activity. During Periods 1 and 2, this activity occurred in long episodes (2-20 min; contractures) at a similar mean (+/- SEM) frequency (0.51 +/- 0.14/h and 0.42 +/- 0.07/h, respectively). No significant differences in hormonal concentrations in MP and AF between these two periods were detected. During Period 3, contractures nearly disappeared (freq: 0.09 +/- 0.05/h), and in MP mean P4 levels were significantly lower and PGFM levels were significantly higher than before. Mean PGFM concentrations in AF were not significantly changed during Period 3. Finally, during Period 4, EMG activity reappeared and a parturient EMG pattern gradually evolved in the presence of a further significant decline of P4 levels and significant increase of PGFM concentrations in MP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Amniotic Fluid; Animals; Cattle; Dinoprost; Electromyography; Estrone; Female; Flumethasone; Labor, Induced; Myometrium; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Uterine Contraction | 1990 |
Plasma concentrations of 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-PGF-2 alpha, oestrone sulphate, oestradiol-17 beta and progesterone in pregnant guinea-pigs treated with polychlorinated biphenyls.
Guinea-pigs treated by gavage with a total dose of 100 mg polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB: Clophen A50) during Days 17-61 of gestation had higher plasma concentrations of 15-keto-13,14-dihydroprostaglandin F-2 alpha, oestrone sulphate and oestradiol-17 beta during the later stages of gestation than did vehicle-treated guinea-pigs. No changes were observed in plasma progesterone concentrations. Our results provide no support for the hypothesis that an enzyme-induced decrease in progesterone concentrations is the main cause of the fetal death observed in PCB-treated guinea-pigs. Topics: Animals; Dinoprost; Environmental Pollutants; Estradiol; Estrogens; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Female; Fetal Death; Guinea Pigs; Polychlorinated Biphenyls; Pregnancy; Progesterone | 1989 |
Hormonal changes associated with induced late abortions in the mare.
Two mares received PGF-2 alpha twice daily until abortion and 2 mares received a combined treatment with oestradiol benzoate and oxytocin. The mares were about 150 days pregnant. The PG-treated animals aborted after 37 and 61 h, respectively, and the fetuses were expelled in intact fetal membranes. The other 2 mares aborted 13 and 27 h after the first oxytocin injection, respectively, and showed strong uterine contractions and expelled the fetuses in disrupted fetal membranes. Concentrations of 15-ketodihydro-PGF-2 alpha increased both after PG and oxytocin injections and in association with the abortion, but after the PG-induced abortion there was an immediate return to basal levels and after the oxytocin-induced abortion there was a large increase in the concentrations, indicating damage of the uterus. Progesterone and relaxin concentrations followed the placental function and decreased in association with the abortions. Oestrone sulphate values differed in the two groups; the oxytocin-treated animals showed a rapid decrease while the mares treated with PG showed first a marked increase and then a decrease. Concentrations of PMSG appeared to be unaffected by the abortions. Topics: Abortion, Induced; Animals; Dinoprost; Estradiol; Estrogens, Conjugated (USP); Estrone; Female; Gonadal Steroid Hormones; Gonadotropins, Equine; Horses; Oxytocin; Pregnancy; Progesterone; Prostaglandins F; Relaxin | 1987 |
Steroid synthetic and prostaglandin metabolizing activity is present in different cell populations from human fetal membranes and decidua.
We examined whether different cell subpopulations from human fetal membranes and decidua produce steroids (estrone and progesterone) and metabolize prostaglandins (prostaglandin F2 alpha to 13, 14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin F2 alpha and if these changed with labor. Amnion, chorion, and decidua were obtained at elective cesarean section at term or at spontaneous labor. Cells were dispersed with collagenase and separated by density on discontinuous Percoll gradients. At cesarean section there was a major broad band of cells from amnion and chorion. This band contained most of the estrone sulfatase (estrone sulfate to estrone) activity. The 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (pregnenolone to progesterone conversion) and prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolizing activities were present in these cells and those that migrated at greater Percoll densities. Amnion and chorion obtained after spontaneous labor had two major bands of cells. Estrone sulfatase was present in cells from both hands, whereas progesterone output from pregnenolone and prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolism predominated in the second band of cells with greater density. This pattern was particularly apparent in chorion. Dispersed cells from decidua tended to migrate throughout the gradient. In general, estrone sulfate to estrone conversion predominated in lighter cells whereas progesterone output from pregnenolone and prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolism predominated in cells of greater density. The output of progesterone from pregnenolone was significantly lower in cell preparations from chorion and decidua at spontaneous labor compared with cesarean section. We conclude that human amnion, chorion, and decidua contain distinct cell subpopulations based on Percoll migration and that in the membranes these change between cesarean section and spontaneous labor. Partial separation of estrone sulfatase from 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolizing activities has been demonstrated, which raises the possibility of paracrine interactions in vivo. Topics: Cells, Cultured; Centrifugation, Density Gradient; Decidua; Dinoprost; Estrone; Extraembryonic Membranes; Female; Humans; Pregnancy; Pregnenolone; Progesterone; Prostaglandins F | 1987 |
Periparturient endocrine changes of conceptus and maternal units in Holstein heifers bearing genetically different conceptuses.
Holstein heifers (n = 21) were balanced across sires and assigned to three service-sire-breed groups in which heifers were inseminated artificially to either purebred Angus (n = 7), Holstein (n = 7) or Brahman (n = 7) bulls. Semen from four bulls was used for each service sire-breed group. Blood samples were collected from a jugular vein thrice weekly from d 160 to 265 of pregnancy, daily thereafter until 15 d postpartum, and then thrice weekly until d 60 postpartum. Concentrations of progesterone, estrone, estradiol, and estrone sulfate from 23 d prepartum to parturition, and of 15-keto-13,14-dihydro-prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGFM) from 2 d prepartum to d 15 postpartum were measured by radioimmunoassay. Heifers within the Brahman-service-sire group had longer gestations (P less than .05) than those of Holstein- or Angus-service-sire groups (285.0 vs 278.7), 279.0 d). Calf birth weight was lower (P less than .05) in Angus- than Holstein- and Brahman-service-sire groups (30.6 vs 36.1, 43.4 kg). Daily trends of prepartum maternal progesterone concentrations were approximately 1 ng/ml lower (P less than .01) in Angus- than Holstein- or Brahman-service-sire groups until luteolysis occurred. Heifers bearing crossbred Angus conceptuses had lower daily trends of prepartum estrogens concentrations (P less than .01), whereas heifers of the Holstein- and, even more dramatically, of the Brahman-service-sire groups had a higher magnitude and greater rise of plasma estrogens concentrations between d -10 and -1 prepartum (less than .01). Postpartum mean concentrations (P less than .05) and response curves of PGFM were lower (P less than .01) in the Angus- than in the Holstein- or Brahman-service-sire groups. Calf birth weights were correlated with least-squares means for maternal concentrations of prepartum estrone (r = .57), estradiol (r = .59) and estrone sulfate (r = .64) and postpartum maternal concentrations of PGFM (r = .56). Functional responses of the conceptus (e.g., estrogens) and maternal units (e.g., progesterone and PGFM) were influenced by conceptus genotype during the periparturient period. Topics: Animals; Cattle; Crosses, Genetic; Dinoprost; Estradiol; Estrogens; Estrone; Female; Insemination, Artificial; Male; Progesterone; Prostaglandins F | 1985 |