| Literature DB >> 12398810 |
Ie-Ming Shih1, Mei-Yu Hsu, Robert J Oldt, Meenhard Herlyn, John D Gearhart, Robert J Kurman.
Abstract
During early pregnancy, intermediate (extravillous) trophoblast infiltrates the basal plate and invades the spiral arteries, a physiological process required to establish the maternal-fetal circulation. Immunostaining studies have shown that differentiation of trophoblast into this invasive subpopulation is associated with down-regulation of E-cadherin expression. To study the function of E-cadherin in trophoblast in vitro, we restored E-cadherin expression in an E-cadherin negative human implantation site intermediate trophoblastic cell line, IST-1, using a recombinant adenovirus, E-cad/Ad5 which constitutively expresses E-cadherin. In contrast to the control IST-1 cells which were individual and pleomorphic in shape, E-cad/Ad5 transduced cells were cohesive, uniform, and round. The motility and invasiveness of E-cad/Ad5 transduced IST-1 cells, as compared with the control cells, was significantly reduced. These effects were contact-dependent and were attenuated by a function-perturbing anti-E-cadherin antibody. In conclusion, our results indicate that expression of E-cadherin in IST-1 cells results in a contact-mediated inhibition of motility and invasion and suggest an important role for E-cadherin down-regulation in the intermediate trophoblast during implantation. Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12398810 DOI: 10.1016/s0143-4004(02)90864-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Placenta ISSN: 0143-4004 Impact factor: 3.481