Abstract

The serum levels of chorionic gonadotropin (LH/CG), progesterone, and estradiol-17β were measured during pregnancy in the common marmoset. The gestation period in five females was 144±1.5 (141–145) days. The LH/CG level increased from the early stage of pregnancy, reached a maximum of 10–17 ng/ml at 50 to 70 days and decreased to under 40 pg/ml at about 100 days. The progesterone level maintained the same value as that at the luteal phase of 20–40 ng/ml until 90 days of pregnancy, when the serum LH/CG was declining, thereafter increased abruptly, reached a maximum of 140–210 ng/ml at 110–130 days and fell to a low level of under 0.4 ng/ml at 5–10 days before parturition. The estradiol-17β was less than 2 ng/ml until 90 days of pregnancy, thereafter increased abruptly and maintained a high level of 40–135 ng/ml until just before parturition. The 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity in the placenta of the common marmoset was 40 times higher than that in the fetal adrenal, while in the Japanese monkey the former was only about one 40th of the latter. The time course of the serum progesterone and estradiol-17β during pregnancy and the role of the placenta which synthesized and secreted these hormones in the common marmoset showed a similarity to those of humans and anthropoid apes rather than those ofMacaca species. The common marmoset represents a valuable animal model for investigating the feto-placental unit in humans.

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