Journal article
Up-regulation of mesotocin receptors in the tammar wallaby myometrium is pregnancy-specific and independent of estrogen
AL Siebel, HM Gehring, CD Nave, RAD Bathgate, CE Borchers, LJ Parry
Biology of Reproduction | OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC | Published : 2002
Abstract
The oxytocin-like peptide of most Australian marsupials is mesotocin, which stimulates uterine contractions and is important for normal birth in the tammar wallaby. Female marsupials have two uteri and, in monovular species such as the tammar, one uterus is gravid with a single fetus, whereas the contralateral uterus is nongravid. A significant increase in myometrial mesotocin receptor concentrations occurs only in the gravid uterus on Day 23 of the 26-day gestation. This study examined whether or not mesotocin receptors are present in the myometrium and are up-regulated at the equivalent stage of the luteal phase in unmated tammars. In contrast to the marked increase in mesotocin receptor m..
View full abstract