Collagen Studies in Late Pregnant Relaxin Null Mice
The relaxin knockout (rlx â/â) mouse was used to assess the effect, during pregnancy, of relaxin with regard to water, collagen content, growth, and morphology of the nipple (N), vagina (V), uterus, cervix (C), pubic symphysis (PS), and mammary gland (MG). The results presented here indicate tha...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 2000-09, Vol.63 (3), p.697-703 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The relaxin knockout (rlx â/â) mouse was used to assess the effect, during pregnancy, of relaxin with regard to water, collagen
content, growth, and morphology of the nipple (N), vagina (V), uterus, cervix (C), pubic symphysis (PS), and mammary gland
(MG). The results presented here indicate that during pregnancy, relaxin increases the growth of the N, C, V, and PS. Large
increases in water content in the PS (20%) occurred in pregnant (Day 18.5) wild-type (rlx +/+) mice but not in rlx â/â animals.
This indicates that in the PS, relaxin might increase the concentration of a water-retaining extracellular matrix component
(hyaluronate). In the pregnant rlx +/+ mouse, collagen content decreased significantly in the N and V but not in other tissues.
There were no significant changes in the rlx â/â mouse. This contrasts with findings in the rat, in which relaxin has been
found to cause decreases in collagen concentrations in the V, C, and PS. Histological analysis showed that the collagen stain
was more condensed in the tissues (V, C, PS, N, and MG) of rlx â/â mice than in those of rlx +/+ mice. This phenomenon indicates
that the failure of collagen degradation and lack of growth in the N underlie the inability of the rlx â/â mice to feed their
young, as reported previously. Vaginal and cervical luminal epithelia, which proliferated markedly in the rlx +/+ pregnant
mice, remained relatively atrophic in the rlx â/â mice. As proliferation and differentiation of uterine and vaginal epithelia
are thought to be induced by a paracrine stromal factor that acts upon estrogen stimulation, our results indicate that relaxin
may be this paracrine factor. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod63.3.697 |