Physiology of the menstrual cycle. (9/176)

Modern techniques of bioassay have permitted correlation of hormonal secretion with genital tissue changes during the normal menstrual cycle. During the follicular phase, estrogen secretion rises while other hormone levels are low. At ovulation luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone surges are associated with falling estrogen levels. Secretions of progesterone and estrogen again are characteristic of the luteal phase ending with menstruation. Gonadotrophin-releasing hormones are detectable just before the luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone surges. Basal body temperature rises with ovulation and is still the most reliable clinical indicator, although ferning and spinnbarkeit (when present) are also quite helpful. Vaginal smears are probably less useful except in the hands of experienced observers.  (+info)

cGMP-dependent ADP depolymerization of actin mediates estrogen increase in cervical epithelial permeability. (10/176)

Estrogen increases secretion of cervical mucus in women, and the effect depends on fragmentation of the cytoskeleton. The objective of the present study was to understand the molecular mechanism of estrogen action. Treatment of human cervical epithelial cells with 17beta-estradiol, sodium nitroprusside (SNP), or 8-bromoguanosine 3', 5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-Br-cGMP) increased cellular monomeric G-actin and decreased polymerized F-actin. The effects of estradiol were blocked by tamoxifen, by the guanylate cyclase inhibitor LY-83583, and by the cGMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor KT-5823. The effects of SNP were blocked by LY-83583 and KT-5823, while the effects of 8-Br-cGMP were blocked only by KT-5823. Treatment with phalloidin decreased paracellular permeability and G-actin. Treatment with 17beta-estradiol, SNP, or 8-Br-cGMP attenuated SNP-induced phosphorylation of [(32)P]adenylate NAD in vitro: tamoxifen blocked the effect of estrogen; LY-83583 blocked the effect of SNP but not that of 8-Br-cGMP, while KT-5823 blocked effects of both SNP and 8-Br-cGMP. These results indicate that estrogen, nitric oxide (NO), and cGMP stimulate actin depolymerization. A possible mechanism is NO-induced, cGMP-dependent protein kinase augmentation of ADP-ribosylation of monomeric actin.  (+info)

Correlation of tissue and plasma RANTES levels with disease course in patients with breast or cervical cancer. (11/176)

The beta-chemokine RANTES was measured in plasma in 43 patients with breast cancer and in 23 patients with cervical cancer, and the RANTES content in primary tumors, tumor metastatic to lymph nodes, and clinically normal skin or pelvic mucosa was measured. In addition, plasma levels were determined in all of the patients for the platelet-derived chemokine beta-thromboglobulin (beta-TG) and for IFN-gamma, interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10, along with serum IgE levels and blood eosinophils. Plasma RANTES levels were found to be higher in order of stages IV, III, II, and I of each cancer except for stage I. A marked increase in plasma RANTES level (> 10,000 pg/ml) was found in 27% of patients with progressive malignancy but in none of those in clinical remission. The platelet RANTES content was correspondingly decreased in those patients with increased plasma RANTES levels. Beta-TG showed a pattern similar to RANTES both in plasma and platelets, but with much less dramatic differences between patients with different stages of disease. Other allergic parameters, IgE, eosinophils and plasma IFN-gamma, IL-2, -5, and -10, were not elevated in the cancer patients. The RANTES content was markedly elevated in the primary tumor and metastatic lesions (lymph node or skin) from all of the patients with breast or cervical cancer, irrespective of the plasma RANTES level. In addition, in patients with progressive breast or cervical cancer, but not in patients thought to be cured of these tumors, the RANTES content was markedly increased in clinically normal tissue taken from near the operative site several months postoperatively, as well as in intact skin or mucosa taken perioperatively near the excised tumor. This study suggests an as-yet-undefined but important role played by RANTES in carcinogenesis, as well as the possibility that a RANTES assay in tissue surrounding a tumor or postoperative tumor site may help predict prognosis in these patients.  (+info)

Mycoplasma species recovered from the reproductive tracts of western Canadian cows. (12/176)

Samples of cervico-vaginal mucus from 633 animals from 110 herds were cultured and yielded the following mycoplasmas: T-strain--88: Mycoplasma bovigenitalium--79, Mycoplasma spp. (Leach Group 7)--7, Acholeplasma laidlawii--4, Mycoplasma bovirhinis--2 and one not typable. Uterine exudates and endometrial scrapings from 80 infertile cows in two herds were examined. Four animals were positive, M. bovigenitalium was isolated three times, A. laidlawii and Mycoplasma arginini once each. Sixty-five normal uterine contents from pregnant cows were examined, one yielded M. bovigenigalium and the same organism was recovered from the fetal kidney. T-strain mycoplasma, M. bovigenitalium and other Mycoplasma spp. appear to be a part of the normal flora of the cervico-vaginal region of clinically normal one and two year old bred heifers in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Although M. arginini was not recovered from the cervico-vaginal region, a single recovery was made from the uterus of an infertile cow.  (+info)

The effect of copper on the distribution of elements in human spermatozoa. (13/176)

Examination of intact individual human spermatozoa by X-ray microanalysis revealed that there was a correlation between particular elements in differnt regions of the cell. There was a constancy in the ratios of sodium to potassium in the head and mid-piece and of calcium to phosphorus in the mid-piece in any one sample, though the ratios varied between samples. This may have reflected the external environment since immersion in culture medium or cervical mucus had little effect on motility, yet markedly altered the sodium: potassium ratio. Incubation with copper wire in semen or cervical mucus significantly reduced the subcellular levels of both sodium and potassium inspermatozoa but did not affect the ratio between these two elements. The metal also displaced zinc from the head region, possible replacing it by copper. This may account for the decreased motility of spermatozoa in contact with copper ions. The observed toxicity of copper for human sperm cells lends support to the theory that part ofthe mode of action of the copper IUD may be due to an alteration in sperm fertilizing potential. Although the level of copper released by IUDs containing 200 mm-2 ofcopper wire exerted a minor toxic effect on spermatozoa, the elemental changes observed here may have great significance in the development of more efficient copper-releasing IUDs or an intracervical device whose action would depend on its spermatotoxiceffect.  (+info)

In situ variation of cervical mucus pH during exposure to atmospheric air. (14/176)

The objective of the present study was to determine if exposure of cervical mucus to air during specular examination could modify mucus pH. Detection of changes is justified because of their possible interference with sperm-mucus interaction, since an acidic pH is unfavorable to sperm penetration and is associated with infertility due to the cervical factor. Twenty women with good quality mucus were evaluated. pH measurements of ecto- and endocervical mucus were made in situ using a glass electrode after 0-, 5- and 10-min exposure to air. There was a progressive alkalinization of mucus pH. Mean values of ectocervical mucus pH were 6.91, 7.16 and 7.27, while mean values of endocervical mucus pH were 7.09, 7.34 and 7.46 at 0, 5 and 10 min, respectively. Significant differences were found between the mean values obtained at 0 and 5 min, and at 0 and 10 min (P<0.05), whereas the differences in mean values at 5 and 10 min were not significant at either site. We conclude that 5 to 10 min of exposure to atmospheric air affects cervical mucus pH in a significant way. Since tests used to evaluate sperm-mucus interaction generally have not considered this possibility, we suggest that they should be performed immediately after mucus collection in order to avoid misinterpretation of the results.  (+info)

Effects of the ion-channel blocker quinine on human sperm volume, kinematics and mucus penetration, and the involvement of potassium channels. (15/176)

Sperm defects in the infertile c-ros knockout mouse model have recently highlighted the importance of volume regulation in sperm function. In this study, washed human spermatozoa were shown to change size and shape, as detected by flow cytometry and light microscopy, in response to the ion-channel blocker quinine (minimum effective doses at 20 and 125 micromol/l respectively). The increase in sperm volume was accompanied by reduced straight-line velocity (VSL) and linearity (LIN) of the swim-path but increased lateral head displacement and curvilinear velocity, while percentage motility was unaffected. Spermatozoa in semen and in artificial cervical mucus were similarly affected at 0.2 and 0.5 mmol/l quinine, resulting in marked reduction of mucus penetration and migration. The effects of quinine on sperm volume and kinematics were reduced or abolished by the K(+)-ionophores valinomycin (1 and 5 micromol/l) and gramicidin (0.5 and 1 micromol/l). In Ca(2+)-free medium; however, the quinine effects largely persisted. The K(+)-channel blocker, 4-aminopyridine (1 and 4 mmol/l), mimicked the quinine effects in the reduction of VSL and LIN, while the K(+)-channel blocker, tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA, 2.5-10 mmol/l), did not affect kinematics. The K(+)-channel (Kv1.3)-specific inhibitor, margatoxin, and the Ca(2+)-dependent K(+)-channel blocker, charybdotoxin, also had no effects. This study suggests that volume regulation in human spermatozoa and the linear trajectory of their motion may rely on quinine-sensitive and TEA-insensitive, largely calcium-independent, potassium channels, and possibly volume-sensitive organic anion channels. These channels could be targets for contraception.  (+info)

Detection of Y chromosome DNA as evidence of semen in cervicovaginal secretions of sexually active women. (16/176)

The detection of traces of semen in cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) from sexually active women practicing unprotected sex is a prerequisite for the accurate study of cervicovaginal immunity. Two semen markers, the prostatic-specific antigen (PSA) and the Y chromosome, were detected in parallel in CVS obtained by a standardized vaginal washing of consecutive women attending the principal medical center for sexually transmitted diseases of Bangui, Central African Republic. PSA was detected by immunoenzymatic capture assay in the cell-free fraction of CVS, and the Y chromosome was detected by a single PCR assay of DNA extracted by silica from the cell fraction (Y PCR). Fifty (19%) cell-free fractions of the 264 beta-globin-positive CVS samples were positive for PSA, and 100 (38%) cell fractions of the CVS samples were positive for the Y chromosome. All the 50 (19%) PSA-containing CVS samples were also positive for the Y chromosome. Fifty (19%) CVS samples were positive only for the Y chromosome, with no detectable PSA. The remaining 164 (62%) CVS samples were both PSA and Y chromosome negative. These findings demonstrate that CVS from sexually active women may contain cell-associated semen residues unrecognized by conventional immunoenzymatic assays used to detect semen components. The detection of cell-associated male DNA with a highly sensitive and specific procedure such as Y PCR constitutes a method of choice to detect semen traces in female genital secretions.  (+info)