Abstract
Placenta secretes corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) into the maternal and fetal circulation, but a CRH binding protein in plasma may decrease its biological activity. Using a charcoal adsorption method we found that 92% of added 125I-Tyr-CRH was bound to a binding protein in the nonpregnant plasma, 72 % in the plasma at term pregnancy, 90% in umbilical cord plasma, 82% in the amniotic fluid in the second and 25 % in the third trimester. CRH added to plasma inhibited the binding of 125I-Tyr-CRH over the concentration range of 0.1–8.8 nmol/l in plasma and of 0.1–2.2 nmol/l in amniotic fluid. There was a significant negative correlation ( R = – 0.80) between the binding capacity of the CRH-binding protein and CRH concentration in maternal plasma. Plasma or amniotic fluid was incubated with 125I-Tyr-CRH and subjected to gel filtration on Sephadex G-50. The bound radioactivity was eluted at the region of M r 25–40 kDA and the unbound radioactivity at the location of synthetic CRH. Bound and unbound CRH concentrations were determined using charcoal adsorption method and gel filtration on Sephadex G-50 in ten maternal plasma samples at the third trimester of pregnancy. Following mean percentages were found to be bound: charcoal method 61.9 ± 6.80% (SE) and gel filtration 62.8 ± 6.33%. We conclude that the bulk of CRH is bound to a binding protein in maternal and fetoplacental circulation, whereas at term pregnancy the role of the binding is small in amniotic fluid.
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