| Literature DB >> 32435281 |
José M Sánchez1, Constantine A Simintiras1, Patrick Lonergan1.
Abstract
Establishment of pregnancy in mammals requires reciprocal molecular communication between the conceptus and endometrium that modifies the endometrial transcriptome and uterine luminal milieu to support pregnancy. Due to the small size of the early embryo and elongating conceptus relative to the volume of the uterine lumen, collection of endometrium adjacent to the developing conceptus is difficult following conventional uterine flushing methods in cattle. Use of endometrial explants in culture can overcome this challenge and reveal information about the dialogue between the developing embryo and the uterus. The aim of this short review is to summarize some of our recent findings in relation to embryo maternal interaction during bovine pregnancy establishment and to put them in the wider context of fertility in cattle.Entities:
Keywords: bovine; conceptus; fertility; progesterone; uterus
Year: 2019 PMID: 32435281 PMCID: PMC7234086 DOI: 10.21451/1984-3143-AR2019-0075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Reprod ISSN: 1806-9614 Impact factor: 1.807
Figure 1Use of an ex-vivo uterine endometrial explant-conceptus co-culture system to elucidate conceptus-induced effects on the endometrium both dependent and independent of interferon-tau (IFNT). Uterine explants taken from the same uterus were exposed to (i) medium alone (control), (ii) 100 ng/ml recombinant ovine IFNT, (iii) a long Day 15 conceptus, or (iv) a short Day 15 conceptus. Numbers of differentially expressed genes indicated for each group are relative to the Control. Modified from Sánchez .
Figure 2Breakdown of metabolites identified in uterine luminal fluid, by super-pathway, on Days 12-14 of cyclic heifers in terms of total: (A) abundance, (B) day effects, (C) progesterone (P4) effects, and (D) day by P4 interactions. Adapted from Simintiras .