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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 20, 431-441, Copyright © 1979 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Florida,
Gainesville, Florida 32610 Explants of endometrium from the porcine uterus secrete labeled proteins into the growth
medium when incubated in vitro in modified Eagles MEM4 containing radioactive L-leucine. Tissue
from 60 day pregnant animals secrete about 30 times as much radioactive material into the medium in 24 h as explants taken from nonpregnant animals on Day 3 of the estrous cycle. The secretions by tissue from pregnant animals were also qualitatively distinct and contained appreciable
quantities of 2 basic proteins, lysozyme and a uterine-specific phosphatase. The latter was identical
to an iron-containing purple protein previously purified either from uterine secretions of progesterone treated, nonpregnant animals or from allantoic fluid. This protein is believed to be involved in
iron transport from mother to fetus. Explants from the endometrium of animals on Days 30, 45,
60, 75, 90 and 105 of pregnancy showed considerable differences in their capacities to produce the
purple protein. Production was maximal by Day 60 tissue (2 mg/g tissue/24 h), but very low in
tissue from late pregnancy (Day 105), an observation which may have considerable implication
with regard to dietary iron supplementation of the pregnant sow. Neither the presence of progesterone nor estradiol-17
2 Department of Animal Science,
University of Florida,
Gainesville, Florida 32610
in the incubation medium altered the quantity or quality of the proteins
produced by the explants during the 24 h incubation. We conclude that it is the hormonal environment of the endometrium at the time of surgery which primarily governs the quantity and quality
of the proteins by short term cultured explants.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Mr. Warren Clark for surgical assistance
and Dr. H Wallace for provision of gilts.
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