| Literature DB >> 521735 |
D G Porter, S J Downing, J M Bradshaw.
Abstract
Porcine relaxin (250 guinea-pig units/mg) infused intravenously into anaesthetized rats at 20 micrograms/h reversibly abolished spontaneous intra-uterine pressure cycles yet left the myometrium responsive to oxytocin in doses of 4--8 mu. The inhibition was found to be primarily of the frequency, rather than of the amplitude, of pressure cycles. Relaxin (5 or 10 micrograms) was capable of completely suppressing uterine activity driven by prostaglandin F2 alpha infusion in oestrogen-treated ovariectomized rats. Whereas the beta-adrenergic blocker, propranolol, had no effect on relaxin-induced inhibition, phentolamine, an alpha-blocker, significantly delayed the relaxin effect. It is unlikely, however, that relaxin operates through an alpha-inhibitory receptor. The results show that relaxin acts primarily as a frequency modulator and is capable of antagonizing an exogenous myometrial stimulant.Entities:
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Year: 1979 PMID: 521735 DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.0830183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol ISSN: 0022-0795 Impact factor: 4.286