Premium
Mechanisms of Relaxin Action in the Reproductive Tract: Studies in the Relaxin‐Deficient ( Rlx −/− ) Mouse
Author(s) -
PARRY LAURA J.,
McGUANE JONATHAN T.,
GEHRING HELEN M.,
KOSTIC IRNA GRACE T.,
SIEBEL ANDREW L.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
annals of the new york academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.712
H-Index - 248
eISSN - 1749-6632
pISSN - 0077-8923
DOI - 10.1196/annals.1282.013
Subject(s) - relaxin , endocrinology , medicine , vagina , cervix , gestation , gene expression , biology , andrology , hormone , pregnancy , anatomy , gene , biochemistry , genetics , cancer
A bstract : 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 TGFβ1 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 α 1 ‐I collagen and TGFβ1 expression in Rlx −/− mice. MMP gene expression was also increased in Rlx −/− mice, especially at term. Administration of recombinant H2 RLX (0.05 μg/μL/h) to Rlx −/− mice for 6 d from gestation day 12.5 caused a significant decrease in α 1 ‐I collagen and MMP‐13 gene expression in the cervix and vagina, but it had no effect on TGFβ1. There was also a significant reduction in ERβ 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.