The final stages of cervical ripening and parturition resemble an inflammatory process. Although the role of cytokines in both spontaneous and experimentally induced parturitions has been described in several small laboratory animals and humans, the involvement of pro-inflammatory and regulatory cytokines in physiologic parturition in cows has not been determined. In this study, the cytokine expression profiles were assessed in bovine cervical tissue at several stages of pregnancy and at parturition. Serial biopsy samples of the cervix were obtained from 10 cows on day 185 and day 275 of pregnancy (which was on average 5.4 days before parturition) and at parturition. Messenger RNA expression levels of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)alpha were determined using real-time polymerase chain reaction and the number of neutrophils and eosinophils was estimated by Luna and Sirius Red staining. At parturition, IL-8 expression had increased 430-fold (p < 0.001) when compared with that of the day 185 of pregnancy, large numbers of neutrophils had invaded the cervix while eosinophils remained scarce, IL-1beta had increased eightfold (p < 0.05) and IL-6 had not changed significantly. Additionally, IL-10 was increased by 10-fold (p < 0.001) and TNFalpha decreased by 57% (p < 0.05) when compared with that of the day 185 of pregnancy. The large increase in expression of IL-8, enabling the influx of neutrophils, is indicative of its important role in the final stage of cervical ripening and at parturition. As previous studies have shown that neutrophils excrete matrix metalloproteinases (MMP), this might contribute to softening of the cervix. In contrast, the only slightly increased levels of IL-1, steady concentrations of IL-6 and decreased TNFalpha, the potential consequences of increased IL-10 expression, indicate that final cervical of cows in ripening at term parturition is an inflammatory process influenced by regulatory cytokines.
The temporal relationship between changes in cervical dilatation, uterine electromyographic (EMG) activity, and maternal plasma concentrations of estradiol 17beta (E(2)), progesterone (P(4)), and 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin-F(2alpha) (PGFM), was investigated in six parturient cows. Calving was induced with a single injection of a synthetic analogue of prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PG) on Day 274 of gestation. Cervical dilatation was measured continuously by measuring the transit time between two implanted ultrasound crystals while at the same time uterine EMG activity was measured through two silver electrodes sutured on the myometrial surface until the expulsive stage of calving had been reached. In blood samples collected at 4-h intervals, starting at the moment of PG injection, the mean plasma E(2) concentration gradually increased and was significantly elevated at 28 h after PG injection. At 4 h after PG treatment, the mean P(4) concentration had dropped significantly and continued to decrease until a value of around 1 ng/ml was reached, where it stayed until the onset of expulsion. Mean plasma PGFM concentrations increased steadily after PG injection, reaching significantly elevated concentrations at 20 h after treatment. In the five cows that delivered calves in anterior positions, uterine EMG activity, expressed as root mean square (RMS in microV), started to increase at a mean interval (+/- SD) of 13.1 +/- 3.7 h following PG treatment. The increase in EMG activity was significantly correlated with changes in plasma PGFM concentrations. In these cows, dilatation of the caudal cervix started after a mean (+/- SD) interval of 28.5 +/- 1.5 h following PG treatment and dilatation progressed at a mean (+/- SD) rate of 2.25 +/- 0.24 cm/h. In one cow with a calf in the posterior position, uterine EMG activity and dilatation started at 15.8 h and 31.8 h, respectively, after induction of calving. We conclude that a predictable sequence of physiological changes occurs around induction of calving, which allows specific timing of future studies on cellular and biochemical changes within the cervix during parturition.
Nitric oxide (NO) plays a key role in the processes leading to cervical softening prior to labor. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) contributes most to the increased production of NO during labor, as demonstrated in the rat cervix, or at term pregnancy in women. Changes in expression of iNOS during late gestation have not yet been studied longitudinally in any species, because repeatedly taking biopsies could not be performed. iNOS mRNA (n = 6) and protein expression (n = 3) in serial cervical biopsies of pregnant pluriparous cows taken around days 225, 250, and 275 of pregnancy and within 1.5 hr after calving (d225, d250, d275 and parturition biopsies, respectively) were measured using quantitative RT-PCR and Western blotting. iNOS mRNA expression decreased from the d225 biopsy onwards, differences being significant between the d250 and d275 (P < 0.05) and between the d275 and parturition biopsies (P < 0.05). iNOS protein expression decreased from d225 to d250 onwards. Immunohistochemical analysis of biopsies showed, besides positive staining in endothelium and epithelium, which remained unchanged at different time points, that iNOS expressing cells in the connective tissue cells of early biopsies were predominantly spindle shaped (mostly smooth muscle cells and some fibroblasts). In the parturition biopsies, iNOS reactivity was mainly found in mononuclear leucocytes. These results lead us to suggest that iNOS from spindle shaped cells is involved in prepartum cervical ripening, while iNOS in mononuclear inflammatory cells may be important for local tissue repair mechanisms during postpartum cervical involution.
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