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Biology of Reproduction 61, 512-520 (1999)
©Copyright 1999 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.


Articles

Relaxin in the Marmoset Monkey: Secretion Pattern in the Ovarian Cycle and Early Pregnancy1

A. Einspanier2,a, R. Nubbemeyera, S. Schloteb, M. Schumacherc, R. Ivellc, K. Fuhrmanna, and A. Martena

a Department of Reproductive Biology, German Primate Center, 37077 Göttingen, Germany b Institute of Chemistry, Veterinary University, Hannover, Germany c Institute for Hormone and Fertility Research, University of Hamburg, 22529 Hamburg, Germany

Relaxin is a peptide hormone with a broad range of biological activities, related not only to parturition and lactation but possibly also to decidualization, implantation, and early pregnancy. The present study was designed to investigate the secretion pattern of relaxin throughout the cycle and early pregnancy in the common marmoset monkey in relation to ovarian function and the systemic hormone milieu. First, a novel relaxin ELISA was developed and validated to confirm the pattern of relaxin secretion during pregnancy. Secondly, serum relaxin profiles were determined through nonconceptive and conceptive cycles and analyzed in relation to the concentration of other hormones and to the development of ovarian follicles and corpora lutea (CL). Blood samples were collected 2–3 times per week from the experimental animals and analyzed for relaxin, progesterone, and LH. The animals from the conceptive cycles were also ultrascanned at these time points to determine the ovarian status up to Day 25 of pregnancy. During early pregnancy, the relaxin levels in serum were approximately 1 ng/ml, increasing up to 15 ng/ml in the second trimester, at a time when progesterone levels had declined. In the third trimester, when progesterone levels were increasing again, the levels of relaxin decreased, returning to basal levels by term of pregnancy. In early pregnancy there was a parallel increase in both relaxin and LH/hCG, with the relaxin rise in the conceptive cycle appearing sooner than in the nonconceptive cycle, suggesting that, like chorionic gonadotropin (CG), relaxin may be a useful and early marker for pregnancy. Unlike the situation in the human, there was no correlation between the levels of either hormone and the number of CL detected, infants born, mother's age, or parity. Relaxin levels increased in early pregnancy before bioactive LH/CG, implying that relaxin is not directly regulated by this gonadotropin. Furthermore, hCG applied to nonconceptive females during the expected time of implantation caused an increase in progesterone but not in relaxin concentrations. In summary, the results obtained indicate that relaxin may be a reliable indicator of early pregnancy status in the common marmoset, but it is independent of direct CG influence.

1 This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Ei 333/4–2 and Iv7/7–2).

2 Correspondence: Almuth Einspanier, Department of Reproductive Biology, German Primate Center, Kellnerweg 4, 37077 Göttingen, Germany. FAX: 49 551 3851 288; aeinspa{at}gwdg.de




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