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Biology of Reproduction 67, 1242-1249 (2002)
© 2002 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

Effects of Fetectomy on Oxytocin Receptors in the Myometrium of the Tammar Wallaby1

Andrew L. Siebela, Helen M. Gehringa, and Laura J. Parry2,a

a Howard Florey Institute of Experimental Physiology and Medicine and Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia

Mesotocin, an oxytocin-like peptide, stimulates uterine contractions during marsupial parturition. Female marsupials have two separate uteri, and in monovular species, the uterus with the conceptus is gravid, whereas the contralateral uterus is nongravid. Marsupials are unique because systemic and feto-placental factors in the regulation of uterine function can be differentiated. In pregnant tammar wallabies, a marked increase in myometrial mesotocin receptors (MTRs) occurs on Day 23 of the 26-day gestation, but only in the gravid uterus. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of removing the conceptus on this MTR up-regulation. Complete fetectomy on Day 20 of gestation resulted in significantly lower MTR mRNA and receptor concentrations on Day 23 compared with sham-operated controls. In contrast, there was no significant difference in MTR expression between controls and partially fetectomized animals in which uterine distension was maintained in the absence of a conceptus. In a related study, we examined MTRs in the myometrium of animals that appeared to be pregnant with a large, distended uterus. However, these uteri contained an abnormally developed fetus and avascular placenta. In these animals, MTR levels were significantly higher in the distended uterus compared with the nondistended uterus, and did not differ from controls. These data demonstrate that uterine occupancy is essential for the marked increase in uterine MTRs observed on Day 23 gestation. It also appears that distension may be one of the key factors involved.

1 This research was supported by a University of Melbourne Research Development Grant. L.J.P. is an Australian Research Council QEII Fellow.

2 Correspondence: Laura J. Parry, Howard Florey Institute, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia. FAX: 61 3 9348 1707; l.parry{at}hfi.unimelb.edu.au




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A. L Siebel, R. A D Bathgate, and L. J Parry
Differential expression of mesotocin receptors in the uterus and ovary of the pregnant tammar wallaby
Reproduction, May 1, 2005; 129(5): 639 - 649.
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