1. Gestational age-related inhibition of placental hCG, alpha hCG and steroid hormone release in vitro by a GnRH antagonist.
- Author
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Siler-Khodr TM, Khodr GS, Rhode J, Vickery BH, and Nestor JJ Jr
- Subjects
- Culture Techniques, Estradiol metabolism, Estrone metabolism, Female, Glycoprotein Hormones, alpha Subunit, Humans, Placental Lactogen metabolism, Pregnancy, Progesterone metabolism, Radioimmunoassay, Time Factors, Chorionic Gonadotropin metabolism, Gestational Age, Peptide Fragments metabolism, Pituitary Hormone Release Inhibiting Hormones pharmacology, Pituitary Hormones, Anterior metabolism, Placenta drug effects, Placental Hormones metabolism
- Abstract
Human placental tissues have been shown to contain gonadotrophin-releasing hormone-(GnRH)-like activity. Thus, the effect of a potent GnRH antagonist (N-Ac-Pro1,D-p-Cl-Phe2,D-Nal(2)3,6-GnRH, obtained from Syntex Laboratories) on placental hormonal release was studied. Explant cultures of placentae of 6 to 15 weeks' gestation were studied. This GnRH antagonist did not inhibit the alpha human chorionic gonadotrophin (alpha hCG), human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), oestrone or oestradiol release from the six- and nine-week placental cultures, but greatly suppressed the release of these hormones in the placental cultures from 13- and 15-week gestations. Synthetic GnRH partially reversed the action of this antagonist on the hormonal releases in the 15-week placental cultures. These data demonstrate a gestational age-related action of this antagonist on placental hormonal release. Thus, a role for the endogenous GnRH-like activity of the placenta in the control of placental hormonogenesis is indicated.
- Published
- 1987
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