How to translate text using browser tools
1 July 2002 Purification and Characterization of Relaxin from the Tammar Wallaby (Macropus eugenii): Bioactivity and Expression in the Corpus Luteum
Ross A. D. Bathgate, Andrew L. Siebel, Philip Tovote, Antonia Claasz, Mary Macris, Geoffrey W. Tregear, Laura J. Parry
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The objective of this study was to isolate and purify prorelaxin or mature relaxin from the tammar wallaby corpus luteum (CL), determine their structure and bioactivity, and test the hypothesis that enzymatic cleavage of prorelaxin occurs in late gestation. Tammar relaxin peptides were extracted from pooled corpora lutea of late pregnant tammars using a combination of HPLC methods, and they were identified using Western blotting with a human (H2) relaxin antisera and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. Although no prorelaxin was identified, multiple 6-kDa peptides were detected, which corresponded to the predicted mature tammar relaxin amino acid sequence, with an A chain of 24 amino acids, and different B chain lengths of 28, 29, 30, and 32 amino acids. Tammar relaxin bound with high affinity to rat cortical relaxin receptors and stimulated cAMP production in the human monocytic cell line, THP-1, which expresses the relaxin receptor. Analysis of individual CL indicated that equivalent amounts of mature relaxin peptides were present throughout gestation and also in unmated tammars at equivalent stages of the luteal phase in the nonpregnant cycle. Immunoreactive relaxin was localized specifically to the luteal cells of the CL and the intensity of immunostaining did not vary between gestational stages. These data show that the CL of both pregnant and unmated tammar wallabies produces mature relaxin and suggests that relaxin expression in this species is not influenced by the conceptus. Moreover, the presence of mature relaxin throughout gestation implies that prohormone cleavage is not limited to the later stages of pregnancy

Ross A. D. Bathgate, Andrew L. Siebel, Philip Tovote, Antonia Claasz, Mary Macris, Geoffrey W. Tregear, and Laura J. Parry "Purification and Characterization of Relaxin from the Tammar Wallaby (Macropus eugenii): Bioactivity and Expression in the Corpus Luteum," Biology of Reproduction 67(1), 293-300, (1 July 2002). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod67.1.293
Received: 22 November 2001; Accepted: 1 February 2002; Published: 1 July 2002
KEYWORDS
corpus luteum
parturition
pregnancy
relaxin
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top