Abstract

It has been postulated that intrauterine volume plays a role in the timing of parturition. In previous studies we found that the onset of parturition in the rat was associated with marked increases in the concentrations of receptors for estrogen and oxytocin in the myometrium. To determine the effects of intrauterine volume on the concentrations of these myometrial receptors, we compared receptor levels in gravid and nongravid uterine horns from unilaterally pregnant rats at or near the time of parturition. Myometria from gravid horns contained substantially greater concentrations of DNA and protein per horn than did myometria from the contralateral nongravid horns. The amounts of receptors per horn for estrogen in the nuclear and cytosol fractions and for oxytocin were 7.5, 5.2, and 4.5 times greater, respectively, in myometria from gravid horns. However, the concentration of receptors per cell was the same in gravid and nongravid horns at or near parturition. These results suggest that uterine stretch causes hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the myometrium, indicative of more DNA and protein per gravid horn than nongravid horn. The sharp rise in concentration per cell of receptors for estrogen and oxytocin occurring about the time of labor, however, appears to be induced by hormonal and not physical factors.

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