Relaxin inhibits the plateau component of the action potential in the circular myometrium of the rat.
- 1 August 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 353 (1) , 51-65
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015321
Abstract
The effects of relaxin on contractility and membrane potential of the longitudinal and circular smooth muscle layers of the uterus have been studied in vitro using estrogen-treated, non-pregnant rats and pregnant rats. Relaxin decreased the amplitude of contractions induced by electrical stimulation of longitudinal myometrium by decreasing the duration of the bursts of action potentials. This effect was transient and tachyphylaxis always developed and was observed following injection of steorids and up to day 17 of pregnancy. There was no inhibition of tissues from rats from day 18 of pregnancy to term. The peptide had no effect on resting membrane potential, space constant or time constant. Action potentials recorded from circular myometrium of non-pregnant rats pre-treated with estrogen consisted of an initial spike or short burst of spikes followed by a prolonged plateau of depolarization. Spontaneous action potentials and associated contractions were abolished within 2 min of exposure to relaxin (10-8 g/ml), while contractions of much smaller amplitude could be evoked with depolarizing current pulses. This effect was associated with depression of the plateau component of the action potential whereas the spike component was left intact. Relaxin had no effect on passive membrane properties. The action potentials of circular myometrium of rats up to day 21 of pregnancy were qualitatively similar to those recorded in the some muscle layer from estrogen-treated, non-pregnant rats and the plateau component was also blocked by relaxin in these tissues. Bursts of spikes were observed in circular strips 24-36 h before parturition, and the effect of the peptide on these was a transient inhibition similar to that observed in longitudinal myometrium. Oxytocin increased the amplitude of the spike, and the amplitude and duration of the plateau. Relaxin abolished the plateau in the presence of 10-11 and 10-10 M-oxytocin, but was ineffective when the concentration of the spasmogen was increased further. Prostaglandin F2.alpha. [PGF2.alpha.] increased the amplitude and duration of the plateau. Relaxin abolished the responses to 10-10 and 10-9 M-PGF2.alpha.. Relaxin specifically inhibits contractions in the circular layer of the myometrium by abolishing the plateau component of the action potential. This action appears to be different from that of other smooth muscle relaxants tested in these experiments (isoprenaline, papaverine and verapamil). All of these abolished simultaneously both the spike and plateau components of the action potential.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- RELAXIN INHIBITS SPONTANEOUS AND PROSTAGLANDIN-DRIVEN MYOMETRIAL ACTIVITY IN ANAESTHETIZED RATSJournal of Endocrinology, 1979
- RAT MYOMETRIAL ACTIVITY IN VIVO: EFFECTS OF OESTRADIOL-17β AND PROGESTERONE IN RELATION TO THE CONCENTRATIONS OF CYTOPLASMIC PROGESTERONE RECEPTORSJournal of Endocrinology, 1978
- Relaxin and its structural relationship to insulinNature, 1978
- response of relaxin-treated rat uterus to prostaglandins and oxytocinProstaglandins, 1977
- Primary structure of porcine relaxin: homology with insulin and related growth factorsNature, 1977
- Effects of oxytocin on ionic currents underlying rhythmic activity and contraction in uterine smooth musclePflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1976
- Action of prostaglandin, PGF2?, on the uterus of the pregnant ratNaunyn-Schmiedebergs Archiv für experimentelle Pathologie und Pharmakologie, 1976
- PHYSIOLOGICAL COMPARISON OF THE LONGITUDINAL AND CIRCULAR MUSCLES OF THE PREGNANT RAT UTERUSThe Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1975
- Myometrial response to prostaglandins enhanced by progesteroneAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1974
- Myometrium of the Pregnant Guinea Pig: The Probable Importance of RelaxinBiology of Reproduction, 1972