Structure and expression of a human oxytocin receptor

T Kimura, O Tanizawa, K Mori, MJ Brownstein…�- Nature, 1992 - nature.com
T Kimura, O Tanizawa, K Mori, MJ Brownstein, H Okayama
Nature, 1992nature.com
JUST before the onset of labour, uterine myometrium becomes extremely sensitive to
oxytocin1 for which it is a primary target tissue, because of a dramatic increase in the
number of oxytocin receptors2, 3. We report here the structure and expression of the human
oxytocin receptor complementary DNA isolated by expression cloning. The encoded
receptor is a 388-amino-acidpolypeptide with7transmembrane domains typical of G protein-
coupled receptors. The oxytocin receptor, expressed in Xenopus oocytes, specifically�…
Abstract
JUST before the onset of labour, uterine myometrium becomes extremely sensitive to oxytocin1 for which it is a primary target tissue, because of a dramatic increase in the number of oxytocin receptors2,3. We report here the structure and expression of the human oxytocin receptor complementary DNA isolated by expression cloning. The encoded receptor is a 388-amino-acidpolypeptide with7transmembrane domains typical of G protein-coupled receptors. The oxytocin receptor, expressed in Xenopus oocytes, specifically responds to oxytocin and induces an inward membrane current. Messenger RNAs for the receptor are of two sizes, 3.6 kilobases in breast, and 4.4 kilobases in ovary, uterine endometrium and myometrium. The mRNA level in the myometrium is very high at term. We conclude that the increase in receptor number in the myometrium at labour is, at least in part, due to the increase in mRNA.
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