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1.
Ann N Y Acad Sci ; 1160: 179-85, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19416182

ABSTRACT

The human population explosion has pushed many mammalian wildlife species to the brink of extinction. Conservationists are increasingly turning to captive breeding as a means of preserving the gene pool. We previously reported that serum immunoactive relaxin provided a reliable means of distinguishing between true and pseudopregnancy in domestic dogs, and this method has since been found to be a reliable indicator of true pregnancy in endangered Asian and African elephants and Sumatran rhinoceroses. Our canine relaxin radioimmunoassay (RIA) has now been adapted and validated to measure relaxin in the serum and urine of felids, including domestic and wild species. Moreover, a commercially available canine serum relaxin kit (Witness) Relaxin Kit; Synbiotics, San Diego, CA), has been adapted for reliable detection of relaxin in urine of some felid species. Our porcine relaxin RIA has also been utilized to investigate the role of relaxin in reproductive processes of the spotted hyena, a species in which the female fetuses are severely masculinized in utero. Indeed, this species might well now be extinct were it not for the timely secretion of relaxin to enable copulation and birth of young through the clitoris. Additional studies have suggested relaxin may be a useful marker of pregnancy in the northern fur seal and the maned wolf (the former species has been designated as "depleted" and the latter as "near threatened"). Given appropriate immunoassay reagents, relaxin determination in body fluids thus provides a powerful tool for conservationists and biologists investigating reproduction in a wide variety of endangered and exotic species.


Subject(s)
Relaxin/blood , Relaxin/urine , Acinonyx/blood , Acinonyx/urine , Animals , Cats , Dogs , Felidae/blood , Felidae/urine , Female , Immunoassay , Lions/blood , Lions/urine , Pregnancy , Relaxin/analysis
2.
Reprod Domest Anim ; 42(1): 111-2, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17214785

ABSTRACT

Relaxin is a pregnancy-specific hormone in the queen and is produced by the placenta. Both serum and urinary relaxin levels can be used to diagnose and monitor pregnancy in the cat; however, only serum levels are commonly measured in practice. The present study aimed to assess whether urine could be used for the rapid diagnosis of pregnancy at an early stage in domestic cats using a bench-top kit to detect relaxin. Paired serum and urine samples were collected during the first month of gestation in six cats. The samples were tested by applying neat serum, urine or urine diluted in non-pregnant cat serum to the Witness Relaxin kit. Relaxin concentrations in the paired samples were also measured by radioimmunoassay. All undiluted urine samples from pregnant cats tested negative using the bench-top kit; however, the kit was able to detect relaxin in urine after dilution with non-pregnant cat serum. Using this as the test sample, the kit was accurate at diagnosing pregnancy from 28 days after mating and some samples tested positive at 21 days after mating. This preliminary work could lead to the development of a home pregnancy test for cats.


Subject(s)
Cats , Pregnancy Tests/veterinary , Pregnancy, Animal/urine , Relaxin/urine , Animals , Cats/physiology , Cats/urine , Female , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Tests/methods , Reagent Kits, Diagnostic/veterinary , Relaxin/blood , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
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