Abstract

Specific immunostaining for endothelin-1 (ET-1) was observed in the uterine mucosa of pregnant and nonpregnant rabbits. During gestation, giant cells immunopositive for ET-1 were identified in either endometrium or myometrium. In the latter, they were located in close proximity to the muscular fibers. High-affinity (dissociation constant = 0.25 nM) high-capacity [maximal binding (Bmax) = 7 pmol/mg protein] receptors for ET-1 were present in myometrial membranes of estrous rabbits. During pregnancy the concentration of ET-1 receptors progressively decreased (Bmax on day 29 = 4 pmol/mg protein), rising again at the time of spontaneous delivery. Conversely, ET-1 receptors in the aorta did not change during pregnancy and parturition. The presence of giant cells immunopositive for ET-1 in close proximity to the myometrial cells, together with the evidence of an increase in ET-1 receptors in myometrium of parturient rabbits, suggests a paracrine role for endometrial ET-1 during delivery. Because we previously demonstrated that oxytocin releases ET-1 from endometrial cells in primary culture and that endometrial and myometrial oxytocin receptors abruptly rise at the time of parturition, we propose that ET-1 might participate in the complex cell-to-cell interactions that occur during labor.

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