Serotonin: An inducer of collagenase in myometrial smooth muscle cells
article
OA: closed
CC0
⤵ 6 in-corpus citations
AI-generated summary
Serotonin was identified as a molecule in fetal bovine serum that induces collagenase production in rat myometrial smooth muscle cells, acting through the 5-HT-2 receptor.
One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works
Abstract
Rat myometrial smooth muscle cells in culture actively produce collagenase in medium containing fetal bovine serum, but not in medium containing newborn bovine serum or containing fetal serum adsorbed with dextran-coated charcoal. A dialyzable molecule has been isolated from fetal bovine serum, which restores the ability of the smooth muscle cells to produce collagenase. The molecule has been purified and identified as serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine). Cells cultured in medium depleted of serotonin for 3 days fail to produce collagenase, as assessed both enzymatically and immunologically. Addition of serotonin promptly restores the ability of the cells to produce the enzyme. The EC50 for serotonin is approximately 2 microM; maximum stimulation of collagenase production is observed at 5 microM. The response is specific for serotonin: a wide variety of compounds tested, either related to serotonin or of potential reproductive significance, were without effect in the induction of collagenase production by the cells. No changes in DNA content, general protein synthesis, or cellular collagen production were observed as a consequence of serotonin depletion or restoration, suggesting a selective effect of the compound on collagenase production. The effect of serotonin was also selective to myometrial smooth muscle cells; collagenase-producing fibroblasts from skin and cervix displayed no serotonin requirement for enzyme production. Studies using specific agonists or antagonists for a variety of serotonin receptor subtypes suggest that the 5-HT-2 receptor mediates the serotonin induction of collagenase in these cells. Preliminary evidence indicates that cultured human myometrial smooth muscle cells are also dependent upon serotonin for collagenase production. The evidence in this study suggests the possibility that serotonin serves as a signal to begin the massive collagen degradation that occurs in the postpartum uterus.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Citation neighborhood
Papers in the corpus that this work cites (lower rings, blue) and that cite this one (upper rings, green). Dot size scales with the paper's in-corpus citation count — bigger dot = more influential within the endo/adeno field. Click a dot to open that paper. [ expand to 2 hops ] — adds papers reached through this work's immediate citers/citees. Heavier; up to 60 extra dots.
References (23)
- W161157908 via openalex
- W1480192557 via openalex
- W1792659091 via openalex
- W1906197854 via openalex
- W1932052686 via openalex
- W1970858347 via openalex
- W1971164815 via openalex
- W1973315321 via openalex
- W1976476429 via openalex
- W1984684706 via openalex
- W1990455581 via openalex
- W1991061194 via openalex
- W2012450323 via openalex
- W2020188765 via openalex
- W2027468709 via openalex
- W2054541934 via openalex
- W2062510144 via openalex
- W2066255368 via openalex
- W2067522982 via openalex
- W2075195713 via openalex
- W2083041807 via openalex
- W2101108802 via openalex
- W2481857159 via openalex
Cited by (6)
- Tryptophan catabolism is dysregulated in leiomyomas 2021
- Tryptophan catabolism is dysregulated in leiomyomas 2021
- Identification of genes with higher expression in human uterine leiomyomas than in the corresponding myometrium 2002
- Serotonin-induced MMP-13 Production Is Mediated via Phospholipase C, Protein Kinase C, and ERK1/2 in Rat Uterine Smooth Muscle Cells 2002
- Regulation of uterine collagenase gene expression: interactions between serotonin and progesterone 1994
- Regulation of collagenase gene expression by serotonin and progesterone in rat uterine smooth muscle cells. 1992
Source provenance
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
License: CC0
· commercial use OK