| Literature DB >> 20233942 |
Michelle Breuiller-Fouché1, Olivier Dubois, Mourad Sediki, Ignacio Garcia-Verdugo, Nades Palaniyar, Zahra Tanfin, Audrey Chissey, Dominique Cabrol, Gilles Charpigny, Céline Mehats.
Abstract
In the present study, we investigated the ability of human fetal membranes (amnion and choriodecidua) to regulate human maternal uterine cell functions through the secretion of surfactant protein (SP)-A and SP-D at the end of pregnancy. We detected the expression of both SP-A (SP-A1 and SP-A2) and SP-D by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. Immunohistochemistry revealed that human fetal membranes expressed both SP-A and SP-D. By Western blot analysis, we demonstrated that SP-A protein expression was predominant in choriodecidua, whereas the amnion predominantly expressed SP-D. Only the secretion of SP-A was evidenced in the culture supernatants of amnion and choriodecidua explants by immunodot blot and confirmed by Western blot. Exogenous human purified SP-A induced stress fiber formation in cultured human myometrial cells via a pathway involving Rho-kinase. Conditioned medium from choriodecidua and amnion explants mimicked the SP-A effect. Treatment of myometrial cells with SP-A-depleted conditioned medium from choriodecidua or amnion explants failed to change the actin dynamic. These data indicate that SP-A released by human fetal membranes is able to exert a paracrine regulation of F-actin filament organization in myometrial cells.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20233942 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00746.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 0193-1849 Impact factor: 4.310