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Characterization of Oxytocin, Vasopressin, and Neurophysin from the Bovine Corpus Luteum*
141
Citations
16
References
1983
Year
Mammalian PhysiologyVeterinary ResearchEducationOxidative StressBioanalysisNeuroendocrine MechanismFeed AdditiveOxytocin BiosynthesisOsmoregulationAnimal PhysiologyArginine VasopressinNervous SystemEndocrinologyPharmacologyBiologyTheriogenologyNeurophysiologyAnimal SciencePhysiologyAnimal HealthVeterinary ScienceBovine OvaryMedicineNeuropeptides
Acid extracts of corpora lutea collected from nonpregnant cows were found to contain oxytocin, arginine vasopressin, and neurophysin. The inhibition curves of the oxytocin and vasopressin extracts showed parallelism with the appropriate standard preparations in specific RIAs and eluted at the same position as the standards using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The neurophysin extract showed parallelism in a bovine neurophysin I RIA and had a similar elution position to the standard on both Sephadex G-50 and HPLC. However, its immunoreactive profile on HPLC differed slightly from that obtained with hypophyseal bovine neurophysin I. In nonpregnant cows the oxytocin content (about 1 microgram g-1 wet wt of tissue) was three orders of magnitude greater than the vasopressin content. Levels of luteal oxytocin were considerably lower in pregnant animals. These results show that the bovine ovary is a rich source of neurohypophysial peptides and suggest that oxytocin biosynthesis may occur within the corpus luteum.
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