User Settings
Article

Cyclic changes of cervical mucus enzymes related to the time of ovulation II. Amino peptidase and esterase.

Moghissi Ks,Syner Fn,B Borin-1976-09-01-PubMed
7

TL;DRAbstract

The enzymes amino peptidase and esterase were identified in human cervical mucus. Their concentration was serially determined during a menstrual cycle in 5 normal ovulatory women and correlated with the time of ovulation as monitored by the basal body temperature and radioimmunoassay of serum luteinizing hormone (LH), progesterone, and estradiol (E2). The activity of both enzymes decreased at midcycle just before the LH surge and began to rise after ovulation. The preovulatory decline in enzyme activity was significant for esterase but not for amino peptidase. The site of production and functional significance of these enzymes are not at present identified.

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

The enzymes amino peptidase and esterase were identified in human cervical mucus. Their concentration was serially determined during a menstrual cycle in 5 normal ovulatory women and correlated with the time of ovulation as monitored by the basal body temperature and radioimmunoassay of serum luteinizing hormone (LH), progesterone, and estradiol (E2). The activity of both enzymes decreased at midcycle just before the LH surge and began to rise after ovulation. The preovulatory decline in enzyme activity was significant for esterase but not for amino peptidase. The site of production and functional significance of these enzymes are not at present identified.

Keywords

OvulationLuteinizing hormoneEndocrinologyInternal medicineMenstrual cycleBasal body temperatureRadioimmunoassayEnzyme

Chat

Click to start Chat