| Literature DB >> 27446968 |
Anthonio O Adefuye1, Henry A Adeola2, Kurt J Sales3, Arieh A Katz4.
Abstract
Inflammation is a multifaceted process involving a host of resident and recruited immune cells that eliminate the insult or injury and initiate tissue repair. In the female reproductive tract (FMRT), inflammation-mediated alterations in epithelial, vascular, and immune functions are important components of complex physiological processes and many local and systemic pathologies. It is well established that intracoital and postcoital function of seminal fluid (SF) goes beyond nutritive support for the spermatozoa cells. SF, in particular, the inflammatory bioactive lipids, and prostaglandins present in vast quantities in SF, have a role in localized immune modulation and regulation of pathways that can exacerbate inflammation in the FMRT. In sexually active women SF-mediated inflammation has been implicated in physiologic processes such as ovulation, implantation, and parturition while also enhancing tumorigenesis and susceptibility to infection. This review highlights the molecular mechanism by which SF regulates inflammatory pathways in the FMRT and how alterations in these pathways contribute to physiology and pathology of the female reproductive function. In addition, based on findings from TaqMan® 96-Well Plate Arrays, on neoplastic cervical cells treated with SF, we discuss new findings on the role of SF as a potent driver of inflammatory and tumorigenic pathways in the cervix.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27446968 PMCID: PMC4947502 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9707252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Components of eicosanoid signalling regulated by SF in the Taqman 96-well plate array. Results are expressed as fold above control.
| Gene | Accession number | Fold change |
|---|---|---|
|
| NM_000962 | 2.43 |
|
| NM_000897 | 10.03 |
|
| NM_000300 | 3.00 |
|
| NM_000933 | 2.82 |
|
| NM_182811 | 2.90 |
|
| NM_016341 | 6.71 |
|
| NM_000700 | 6.66 |
|
| NM_005139 | 3.44 |
|
| NM_001154 | >100 |
|
| NM_000860 | 3.12 |
↑: fold increase.
↓: fold decrease.
Kallikrein-related peptidases regulated by SF in the Taqman 96-well plate array. Results are expressed as fold above control.
| Gene | Accession number | Fold change |
|---|---|---|
|
| NM_002257 | 1.56 |
|
| NM_001002231 | 19.59 |
|
| NM_001030047 | 3.45 |
|
| NM_022046 | 2.53 |
|
| NM_000892 | 1.73 |
↑: fold increase.
↓: fold decrease.
Proinflammatory cytokines/chemokines regulated by SF in the Taqman 96-well plate array. Results are expressed as fold above control.
| Gene | Accession number | Fold change |
|---|---|---|
|
| NM_002982 | 4.43 |
|
| NM_002985 | 5.24 |
|
| NM_001511 | 12.37 |
|
| NM_002089 | 2.04 |
|
| NM_002090 | 8.19 |
|
| NM_005409 | 2.47 |
|
| NM_000575 | 68.56 |
|
| NM_000600 | 4.19 |
|
| NM_000584 | 38.9 |
|
| NM_000882 | 2.36 |
|
| NM_002188 | 1.39 |
|
| NM_001562 | 17.84 |
|
| NM_002468 | 9.41 |
|
| NM_001165412 | 2.32 |
|
| NM_014011 | >100 |
|
| NM_000594 | 26.55 |
|
| NM_003264 | 88.47 |
|
| NM_138554 | 1.66 |
|
| NM_000201 | 3.82 |
|
| NM_000632 | 4.78 |
↑: fold increase.
↓: fold decrease.
Figure 1Schematic diagram showing the role of seminal fluid-mediated inflammation in the regulation of physiology and pathology of the female reproductive tract. SF has been shown to contain a wide variety of signaling molecules including cytokines, TGFβ, and PGE2. Exposures of the female reproductive tract (FMRT) to these molecules can impact on the physiology and pathology of the FMRT. SF regulation of TNF-α and GM-CSF enhances ovulation process by increasing ovulation time. Regulation of Tregs population promotes maternal tolerance and foetal implantation while SF-mediated regulation of PGs enhances cervical dilation during parturition. It has been established that SF can mediate pathologic conditions within the FMRT. In endometrial tumorigenesis, SF-mediated regulation of FGF-2 via the activation of EP2-EGFR-ERK signaling enhances tumor progression. Similarly, by regulating COX-PGE2, LOX-LTs, kallikrein-kinin, cytokines, and chemokine signaling SF promotes cervical tumorigenesis in sexually active women. In addition, SF-mediated regulation of CCR5 (HIV chemokine coreceptor) further allude to its role in HIV infection and cervical tumorigenesis.