Relaxin is a 6-kDa peptide in the insulin superfamily of hormones. In addition to its effects on reproductive and musculoskeletal ligaments, relaxin has demonstrated beneficial effects on cardiac, renal, and vascular systems in preclinical models. The mouse intrapubic ligament ex vivo bioassay is the current standard for measuring in vivo relaxin bioactivity. However, this bioassay necessitates euthanasia and dissection of large cohorts to measure the intrapubic ligament at specified time points. We hypothesized that µCT imaging could be used to reduce the number of animals necessary for the intrapubic ligament bioassay by enabling a single animal to be followed longitudinally throughout the study rather than euthanizing different cohorts at established time points. Female CD1 mice were used to compare µCT imaging with the current standard. Both protocols revealed significant differences in intrapubic ligament length, with the µCT data having greater power when corrected for baseline imaging. From these data, we concluded that using µCT to measure the intrapubic ligament in mice primed with estrogen and dosed with relaxin is a viable refinement and will allow the use of fewer animals in longitudinal studies and provide more robust data, because animals can serve as their own controls.
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