Abstract

Concentrations of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (i.e. cyclooxygenase; PGH synthase) and prostacyclin synthase (PGI synthase) were quantified with specific radioimmunometric assays inhuman myometrium during the last trimester of pregnancy (n=23) and in non-pregnant controls (n=8). Pregnant myometrium contained 3 times more PGH synthase per mg microsomal protein than non-pregnant myometrium (p < 0.01) but there was no increase with increasing gestational age in the third trimester nor with the onset of labor. In pregnancy, as compared to the non-pregnant state, there was no significant change in the PGI synthase content of myometrial microsomes, but significantly more PGI synthase was recovered in other subcellular fractions (p < 0.01). This suggests that pregnancy affects preferential changes in the subcellular distribution of PGI synthase in myometrial cells. Relative to its PGI synthase content pregnant myometrium contained twice as much PGH synthase as non-pregnant myometrium (p < 0.01). This may offer further evidence that PGH synthase rather than PGI synthase itself is the rate limiting factor in myometrial PGI 2 production. On the other hand, the much larger increase in PGH synthase than in PGI synthase in pregnant as compared to non-pregnant myometrium, may serve to promote preferential synthesis of prostaglandins that are potent myometrial stimulants and of critical importance in human parturition.

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