Abstract
Relatively large amounts of immunoreactive prolactin were measured in homogenates of human decidual tissue obtained immediately after delivery of normal term pregnancies. In order to study the release and possible synthesis of prolactin by this tissue, explants of decidua were incubated for 24 hours at 37°C in oxygenated Gey's buffer containing 20% fetal calf serum. When cycloheximide was added to the medium in concentrations sufficient to prevent in vitro protein synthesis, 85–90% of the prolactin present in the tissue was released into the medium during the first 3 hours of incubation. No additional prolactin accumulated in either the medium or the tissue during the remainder of the incubation period. In the absence of cycloheximide, the prolactin concentration in the medium increased progressively during incubation, so that after 24 hours the total amount of hormone present in the tissue and medium was significantly greater than that in the tissue and medium prior to incubation (37.6 ± 9.6 ng/ml at 0 time vs 82.2 ± 7.7 ng/ml at 24 hours). When 3H-1-leucine (100 u Ci) was supplied during incubation, radioactive proteins were detected in the medium at 24 hr, 14–20% of which were specifically precipitated by antiserum to human pituitary prolactin. When aliquots of this medium were chromatographed on Sephadex G-100, 80–95% of the 3H-proteins precipitated by antiserum to pituitary prolactin eluted in the same position as did purified, iodinated pituitary prolactin. These data indicate that a species of prolactin which is identical to pituitary prolactin by the criteria of immunoprecipitation and gel chromatography is synthesized by human decidual tissue in vitro .
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