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Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia

An altered oxytocin and progesterone receptor (OXTR and PGR, respectively) expression was postulated in canine uterine inertia (UI), which is the lack of functional myometrial contractions. OXTR and PGR expressions were compared in uterine tissue obtained during C-section due to primary UI (PUI; n =...

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Autores principales: Jungmann, Carolin, Houghton, Caroline Gauguin, Nielsen, Frederik Goth, Packeiser, Eva-Maria, Körber, Hanna, Reichler, Iris M., Balogh, Orsolya, Goericke-Pesch, Sandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36362391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113601
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author Jungmann, Carolin
Houghton, Caroline Gauguin
Nielsen, Frederik Goth
Packeiser, Eva-Maria
Körber, Hanna
Reichler, Iris M.
Balogh, Orsolya
Goericke-Pesch, Sandra
author_facet Jungmann, Carolin
Houghton, Caroline Gauguin
Nielsen, Frederik Goth
Packeiser, Eva-Maria
Körber, Hanna
Reichler, Iris M.
Balogh, Orsolya
Goericke-Pesch, Sandra
author_sort Jungmann, Carolin
collection PubMed
description An altered oxytocin and progesterone receptor (OXTR and PGR, respectively) expression was postulated in canine uterine inertia (UI), which is the lack of functional myometrial contractions. OXTR and PGR expressions were compared in uterine tissue obtained during C-section due to primary UI (PUI; n = 12) and obstructive dystocia (OD, n = 8). In PUI, the influence of litter size was studied (small/normal/large litter: PUI-S/N/L: n = 5/4/3). Staining intensity in immunohistochemistry was scored for the longitudinal and circular myometrial layer and summarized per dog (IP-Myoscore). Mean P4 did not differ significantly between PUI (n = 9) and OD (n = 7). OXTR and PGR expressions (ratios) were significantly higher in PUI (OXTR: p = 0.0019; PGR: p = 0.0339), also for OXTR in PUI-N versus OD (p = 0.0034). A trend for a higher PGR IP-Myoscore was identified (PUI-N vs. OD, p = 0.0626) as well as an influence of litter size (lowest PGR-Myoscore in PUI-L, p = 0.0391). In conclusion, PUI was not related to higher P4, but potentially increased PGR availability compared to OD. It remains to be clarified whether OXTR is upregulated in PUI due to a counterregulatory mechanism to overcome myometrial quiescence or downregulated in OD due to physiological slow OXTR desensitization associated with an advanced duration of labor. Identified OXTR differences between myometrial layers indicate the need for further research.
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spelling pubmed-96538162022-11-15 Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia Jungmann, Carolin Houghton, Caroline Gauguin Nielsen, Frederik Goth Packeiser, Eva-Maria Körber, Hanna Reichler, Iris M. Balogh, Orsolya Goericke-Pesch, Sandra Int J Mol Sci Article An altered oxytocin and progesterone receptor (OXTR and PGR, respectively) expression was postulated in canine uterine inertia (UI), which is the lack of functional myometrial contractions. OXTR and PGR expressions were compared in uterine tissue obtained during C-section due to primary UI (PUI; n = 12) and obstructive dystocia (OD, n = 8). In PUI, the influence of litter size was studied (small/normal/large litter: PUI-S/N/L: n = 5/4/3). Staining intensity in immunohistochemistry was scored for the longitudinal and circular myometrial layer and summarized per dog (IP-Myoscore). Mean P4 did not differ significantly between PUI (n = 9) and OD (n = 7). OXTR and PGR expressions (ratios) were significantly higher in PUI (OXTR: p = 0.0019; PGR: p = 0.0339), also for OXTR in PUI-N versus OD (p = 0.0034). A trend for a higher PGR IP-Myoscore was identified (PUI-N vs. OD, p = 0.0626) as well as an influence of litter size (lowest PGR-Myoscore in PUI-L, p = 0.0391). In conclusion, PUI was not related to higher P4, but potentially increased PGR availability compared to OD. It remains to be clarified whether OXTR is upregulated in PUI due to a counterregulatory mechanism to overcome myometrial quiescence or downregulated in OD due to physiological slow OXTR desensitization associated with an advanced duration of labor. Identified OXTR differences between myometrial layers indicate the need for further research. MDPI 2022-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9653816/ /pubmed/36362391 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113601 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Jungmann, Carolin
Houghton, Caroline Gauguin
Nielsen, Frederik Goth
Packeiser, Eva-Maria
Körber, Hanna
Reichler, Iris M.
Balogh, Orsolya
Goericke-Pesch, Sandra
Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title_full Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title_fullStr Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title_full_unstemmed Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title_short Involvement of Oxytocin and Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Etiology of Canine Uterine Inertia
title_sort involvement of oxytocin and progesterone receptor expression in the etiology of canine uterine inertia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36362391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113601
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