Let $G=(V,E)$ be a graph with an even number of vertices $|V|=2n$. Assume that $G$ is $K_{3,3}$-free i.e. it does not contain a graph isomorphic to biclique $K_{3,3}$. A perfect matching of $G$ is a partition of the set of vertices $V$ onto disjoint two-element subsets according to edges $E$.
Question: Are there any known upper bounds for the number of perfect matchings of such graphs?
I am not a specialist in graph theory and after an extensive internet search, I was only able to find that the complexity of computing perfect matchings for such $K_{3,3}$-free graphs is lower than the one in the general case (it reduces to NC from beeing #P hard).
Motivation: I stumbled on this problem while studying an unrelated physics problem that concerns contextuality in a restricted model of quantum computing based on Majorana fermions (see for example this work by Bravyi).