Literature DB >> 14985476

Mouse blastocysts release a lipid which activates anandamide hydrolase in intact uterus.

M Maccarrone1, M DeFelici, F G Klinger, N Battista, F Fezza, E Dainese, G Siracusa, A Finazzi-Agrò.   

Abstract

Anandamide (N-arachidonoylethanolamine, AEA) is a major endocannabinoid, known to impair mouse pregnancy and embryo development and to induce apoptosis in blastocysts. Here we show that mouse blastocysts rapidly (within 30 min of culture) release a soluble compound, that increases by approximately 2.5-fold the activity of AEA hydrolase (fatty acid amide hydrolase, FAAH) present in the mouse uterus, without affecting FAAH gene expression at the translational level. This "FAAH activator" was produced by both trophoblast and inner cell mass cells, and its initial biochemical characterization showed that it was fully neutralized by adding lipase to the blastocyst-conditioned medium (BCM), and was potentiated by adding trypsin to BCM. Other proteases, phospholipases A(2), C or D, DNAse I or RNAse A were ineffective. BCM did not affect the AEA-synthesizing phospholipase D, the AEA-binding cannabinoid receptors, or the selective AEA membrane transporter in mouse uterus. The FAAH activator was absent in uterine fluid from pregnant mice and could not be identified with any factor known to be released by blastocysts. In fact, platelet-activating factor inhibited non-competitively FAAH in mouse uterus extracts, but not in intact uterine horns, whereas leukotriene B(4) or prostaglandins E(2) and F(2)alpha had no effect. Overall, it can be suggested that blastocysts may protect themselves against the noxious effects of uterine endocannabinoids by locally releasing a lipid able to cross the cell membranes and to activate FAAH. The precise molecular identity of this activator, the first ever reported for FAAH, remains to be elucidated.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14985476     DOI: 10.1093/molehr/gah034

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Hum Reprod        ISSN: 1360-9947            Impact factor:   4.025


  13 in total

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Review 2.  The complications of promiscuity: endocannabinoid action and metabolism.

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Review 4.  Physiological and molecular determinants of embryo implantation.

Authors:  Shuang Zhang; Haiyan Lin; Shuangbo Kong; Shumin Wang; Hongmei Wang; Haibin Wang; D Randall Armant
Journal:  Mol Aspects Med       Date:  2013-01-02

5.  Implantation failure in mice with a disruption in Phospholipase C beta 1 gene: lack of embryonic attachment, aberrant steroid hormone signalling and defective endocannabinoid metabolism.

Authors:  Panayiotis Filis; Peter C Kind; Norah Spears
Journal:  Mol Hum Reprod       Date:  2013-01-07       Impact factor: 4.025

6.  Endocannabinoid regulation in human endometrium across the menstrual cycle.

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Review 8.  Endocannabinoid signaling in female reproduction.

Authors:  Xiaofei Sun; Sudhansu K Dey
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9.  Lipopolysaccharide-induced murine embryonic resorption involves changes in endocannabinoid profiling and alters progesterone secretion and inflammatory response by a CB1-mediated fashion.

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Journal:  Mol Cell Endocrinol       Date:  2015-05-06       Impact factor: 4.102

10.  Characterisation of the dynamic behaviour of lipid droplets in the early mouse embryo using adaptive harmonic generation microscopy.

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Journal:  BMC Cell Biol       Date:  2010-06-03       Impact factor: 4.241

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