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  1. In the rat, the maintenance of gestation is dependent on progesterone production from the corpora lutea (CL), which are under the control of pituitary, decidual and placental hormones. The luteal metabolism of...

    Authors: Marisa A Clementi, Ricardo P Deis and Carlos M Telleria
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:22
  2. Uterine luminal epithelial cell response to different hormonal strategies was examined to determine commonality when an endometrium attains a receptive, stimulated, morphological profile that may lead to succe...

    Authors: Susan M Adams, Vera Terry, Margot J Hosie, Nalini Gayer and Christopher R Murphy
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:21
  3. Recent reports indicate that functional mouse oocytes and sperm can be derived in vitro from somatic cell lines. We hypothesize that in adult human ovaries, mesenchymal cells in the tunica albuginea (TA) are b...

    Authors: Antonin Bukovsky, Michael R Caudle, Marta Svetlikova and Nirmala B Upadhyaya
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:20
  4. It has been suggested that trophoblast attachment requires co-expression of integrin alpha V beta 3 and its ligand osteopontin at the fetal-maternal interface. Until now the expression patterns of integrin alp...

    Authors: Sarah Kimmins, Hai Choo Lim and Leslie A MacLaren
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:19
  5. Intrauterine infection is considered as one of the major maternal insults during pregnancy. Intrauterine infection during pregnancy could lead to brain damage of the developmental fetus and offspring. Effects ...

    Authors: Mahmoud Huleihel, Hava Golan and Mordechai Hallak
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:17
  6. Maintenance of ovarian blood flow (OBF) is suggested to be important for regular ovulation in women with polycystic ovaries (PCO). The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether electro-acupunctur...

    Authors: Elisabet Stener-Victorin, Rie Kobayashi, Orie Watanabe, Thomas Lundeberg and Mieko Kurosawa
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:16
  7. Fractionation and characterization of gonadotropins (GtH) from Fundulus heteroclitus pituitary extracts were carried out using a biocompatible liquid chromatographic procedure (Pharmacia FPLC system). Chromatogra...

    Authors: Yu-Wai Peter Lin, Teresa R Petrino and Robin A Wallace
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:14
  8. The neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and subtypes of GABA receptors were recently identified in adult testes. Since adult Leydig cells possess both the GABA biosynthetic enzyme glutamate decarbo...

    Authors: Christof Geigerseder, Richard FG Doepner, Andrea Thalhammer, Annette Krieger and Artur Mayerhofer
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:13
  9. There is a dynamic interplay between pro- and anti-oxidant substances in human ejaculate. Excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation can overwhelm protective mechanism and initiate changes in lipid and...

    Authors: Dorota Sanocka and Maciej Kurpisz
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:12
  10. This review will focus the roles of TNF-alpha, IL-1 alpha, and IL-1 beta in the mammalian testis and in two testicular pathologies, testicular torsion and orchitis. TNF alpha in the testis is produced by round...

    Authors: Jeffrey J Lysiak
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:9
  11. The pathogenesis of human spontaneous abortion involves a complex interaction of several genetic and environmental factors. The firm association between increased homocysteine concentration and neural tube def...

    Authors: Henrik Zetterberg
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:7
  12. This study investigates ovulation and egg deposition behaviors in the anuran Eleutherodactylus coqui from Puerto Rico in response to stimulation with gonadotropin and gonadotropin releasing hormones. Five hormone...

    Authors: Scott F Michael, Christine Buckley, Esteban Toro, Alberto R Estrada and Shawn Vincent
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:6
  13. It is well established that the growth of the prostate gland is a hormone-dependent phenomenon involving both androgenic and estrogenic control. Proliferation of prostate cells is, at least in part, under cont...

    Authors: Trent D Lund, Daniel J Munson, Herman Adlercreutz, Robert J Handa and Edwin D Lephart
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:5
  14. Anchorage of cells to "heparin" – binding domains that are prevalent in extracellular matrix (ECM) components is thought to occur primarily through the syndecans, a four-member family of transmembrane heparan ...

    Authors: DeannaLee M Beauvais and Alan C Rapraeger
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:3
  15. Prostate cancer (PCa) is no exception to the multi-step process of metastasis. As PCa progresses, changes occur within the microenvironments of both the malignant cells and their targeted site of metastasis, e...

    Authors: Delisha A Stewart, Carlton R Cooper and Robert A Sikes
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2004 2:2
  16. Gonadotropin releasing hormone analogues (GnRHa) are often used to regress endometriosis implants and prevent premature luteinizing hormone surges in women undergoing controlled ovarian stimulation. In additio...

    Authors: Xiaoping Luo, Jingxia Xu and Nasser Chegini
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:125

    The Retraction Note to this article has been published in Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2015 13:25

  17. The extracellular matrix (ECM) of porcine mature oocytes was revealed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) after treatment with tannic acid and ruthenium red. Present in the perivitelline space (PVS) and ...

    Authors: Jacques E Fléchon, Jeril Degrouard, Václav Kopečný, Juraj Pivko, Antonin Pavlok and Jan Motlik
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:124
  18. This article presents an overview of immunological factors and their role in the development of endometriosis, with emphasis on inflammatory cytokines, growth and adhesion factors. Although retrograde menstrua...

    Authors: Cleophas M Kyama, Sophie Debrock, Jason M Mwenda and Thomas M D'Hooghe
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:123
  19. During pregnancy there is an alteration in maternal immunity within the uterus where innate, proinflammatory immune responses are tightly regulated to prevent immunological rejection of the fetal allograft. Di...

    Authors: Morgan R Peltier
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:122
  20. The adaptive immune system of placental mammals has evolved to tolerate the fetus. Rejection of the fetus by adaptive immune responses is therefore a rare event, with abortion being caused more frequently by i...

    Authors: Colette Kanellopoulos-Langevin, Stéphane M Caucheteux, Philippe Verbeke and David M Ojcius
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:121
  21. The role of the maternal immune system during pregnancy has focused mainly on the aspect of immune tolerance to the invading trophoblast and, therefore, fetus. While this is a critical aspect of reproductive i...

    Authors: Gil Mor and Vikki M Abrahams
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:119
  22. The human endometrium is an important site of innate immune defence, giving protection against uterine infection. Such protection is critical to successful implantation and pregnancy. Infection is a major caus...

    Authors: Anne E King, Hilary OD Critchley and Rodney W Kelly
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:116
  23. The receptor for the peptide hormone relaxin has recently been identified as the heptahelical G-protein coupled receptor, LGR7. In order to generate molecular tools with which to characterize both in vivo and in ...

    Authors: Richard Ivell, Marga Balvers, Yvonne Pohnke, Ralph Telgmann, Olaf Bartsch, Karin Milde-Langosch, Ana-maria Bamberger and Almuth Einspanier
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:114
  24. At term, cervical ripening in coordination with uterine contractions becomes a prerequisite for a normal vaginal delivery. Currently, cervical ripening is considered to occur independently from uterine contrac...

    Authors: Horacio A Rodríguez, Hugo H Ortega, Jorge G Ramos, Mónica Muñoz-de-Toro and Enrique H Luque
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:113
  25. The lipocalin (LCN) family of structurally conserved hydrophobic ligand binding proteins is represented in all major taxonomic groups from prokaryotes to primates. The importance of lipocalins in reproduction ...

    Authors: Katherine G Hamil, Qiang Liu, P Sivashanmugam, M Anbalagan, Suresh Yenugu, Rama Soundararajan, Gail Grossman, AJ Rao, Charles E Birse, Stephen M Ruben, Richard T Richardson, Yong-Lian Zhang, Michael G O'Rand, Peter Petrusz, Frank S French and Susan H Hall
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:112
  26. Pregnancy is hypercoagulable state. The field of thrombophilia; the tendency to thrombosis, has been developed rapidly and has been linked to many aspects of pregnancy. It is recently that severe pregnancy com...

    Authors: Michael J Kupferminc
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:111
  27. A considerable number of central nervous system pathologies remain undiagnosed during the first two trimesters of pregnancy. This group of disorders includes anomalies of brain proliferation, migration and cor...

    Authors: Gustavo Malinger, Dorit Lev and Tally Lerman-Sagie
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:110
  28. The onset of clinical assisted reproduction, a quarter of a century ago, required the isolation of motile spermatozoa. As the indication of assisted reproduction shifted from mere gynaecological indications to...

    Authors: Ralf R Henkel and Wolf-Bernhard Schill
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:108
  29. Throughout spermatogenesis multiplication, maturation and differentiation of germ cells results in the formation of the male gamete. The understanding of spermatogenesis needs detailed informations about the o...

    Authors: Adolf-Friedrich Holstein, Wolfgang Schulze and Michail Davidoff
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:107
  30. Satellite cells are myogenic stem cells responsible for the post-natal growth, repair and maintenance of skeletal muscle. This review focuses on the basic biology of the satellite cell with emphasis on its rol...

    Authors: Jennifer CJ Chen and David J Goldhamer
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:101
  31. Presumably, the 'hard-wired' neuronal circuitry of the adult brain dissuades addition of new neurons, which could potentially disrupt existing circuits. This is borne out by the fact that, in general, new neur...

    Authors: Jessica B Lennington, Zhengang Yang and Joanne C Conover
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:99
  32. Cloning by nuclear transfer using mammalian somatic cells has enormous potential application. However, somatic cloning has been inefficient in all species in which live clones have been produced. High abortion...

    Authors: X Cindy Tian, Chikara Kubota, Brian Enright and Xiangzhong Yang
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:98
  33. Serotonin (5-HT) contributes to the prenatal development of the central nervous system, acting as a morphogen in the young embryo and later as a neurotransmitter. This biologically active agent influences both...

    Authors: Irina P Butkevich, Ludmila I Khozhai, Victor A Mikhailenko and Vladimir A Otellin
    Citation: Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2003 1:96

Annual Journal Metrics

  • 2022 Citation Impact
    4.4 - 2-year Impact Factor
    5.3 - 5-year Impact Factor
    1.429 - SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
    1.059 - SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)

    2023 Speed
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2023 CiteScore Update

We are delighted to announce our 2023 CiteScore of 7.9! Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology remains firmly in Q1 within the Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Medicine categories. New Content Item