Literature DB >> 18716939

Promotion of angiogenesis by human endometrial lymphocytes.

Caroline Dunk1, Samantha Smith, Aleah Hazan, Wendy Whittle, Rebecca Lee Jones.   

Abstract

The human endometrium is a unique tissue that undergoes dramatic monthly remodeling during the menstrual cycle in preparation for an implanting conceptus. This remodeling involves sequential proliferation and differentiation of endometrial stromal and epithelial cells, coupled with extensive angiogenesis and infiltration of a specific specialized immune cell subset. Increasing evidence points to an essential role for these maternal leukocytes in stimulating the endometrial angiogenesis, and we propose that they also play a key role in the decidual vascular transformation. Aberrant endometrial angiogenesis, decidualisation and vascular transformation is thought to underlie many pathologies of pregnancy, from infertility to the development of preeclampsia and Intra Uterine Growth Restriction. In this chapter we review the cellular processes associated with each stage of endometrial and decidual transformation, detailing the role of the immune cell populations and the angiogenic and chemotactic factors secreted by them.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18716939     DOI: 10.1080/08820130802191466

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunol Invest        ISSN: 0882-0139            Impact factor:   3.657


  6 in total

1.  Global gene expression profiling of proliferative phase endometrium reveals distinct functional subdivisions.

Authors:  Rafaella G Petracco; Alice Kong; Olga Grechukhina; Graciela Krikun; Hugh S Taylor
Journal:  Reprod Sci       Date:  2012-05-22       Impact factor: 3.060

2.  Depletion of γδ T Cells Leads to Reduced Angiogenesis and Increased Infiltration of Inflammatory M1-like Macrophages in Ischemic Muscle Tissue.

Authors:  Christoph Arnholdt; Konda Kumaraswami; Philipp Götz; Matthias Kübler; Manuel Lasch; Elisabeth Deindl
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-04-29       Impact factor: 7.666

3.  Lymphoid and myeloid cell populations in the non-pregnant human Fallopian tube and in ectopic pregnancy.

Authors:  J L V Shaw; P Fitch; J Cartwright; G Entrican; J Schwarze; H O D Critchley; A W Horne
Journal:  J Reprod Immunol       Date:  2011-03-17       Impact factor: 4.054

4.  Periconceptional exposure to lopinavir, but not darunavir, impairs decidualization: a potential mechanism leading to poor birth outcomes in HIV-positive pregnancies.

Authors:  Smriti Kala; Caroline Dunk; Sebastian Acosta; Lena Serghides
Journal:  Hum Reprod       Date:  2020-08-01       Impact factor: 6.918

5.  The dynamic changes in the number of uterine natural killer cells are specific to the eutopic but not to the ectopic endometrium in women and in a baboon model of endometriosis.

Authors:  Josephine A Drury; Kirstin L Parkin; Lucy Coyne; Emma Giuliani; Asgerally T Fazleabas; Dharani K Hapangama
Journal:  Reprod Biol Endocrinol       Date:  2018-07-18       Impact factor: 5.211

6.  Infiltration of myeloid cells into decidua is a critical early event in the labour cascade and post-partum uterine remodelling.

Authors:  Oksana Shynlova; Tamara Nedd-Roderique; Yunqing Li; Anna Dorogin; Tina Nguyen; Stephen J Lye
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2013-02-05       Impact factor: 5.310

  6 in total

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