Literature DB >> 35383354

BMP/SMAD1/5 Signaling in the Endometrial Epithelium Is Essential for Receptivity and Early Pregnancy.

Suni Tang1,2, Dominique I Cope1,2, Yasmin M Vasquez1,2, Diana Monsivais1,2.   

Abstract

The biological processes that control endometrial receptivity and embryo implantation are critical for the successful outcome of pregnancy. The endometrium is the complex inner lining of the uterine wall that is under the cyclical control of estrogen and progesterone and is a site of intimate contact between mother and blastocyst. The bone morphogenetic signaling (BMP) pathway is a highly conserved signaling pathway that controls key cellular processes throughout pregnancy and exerts intracellular effects via the SMAD1/5 transcription factors. To delineate the endometrial compartment-specific roles of BMP signaling, we generated mice with epithelial-specific conditional deletion of SMAD1/5 using Lactoferrin-icre (Smad1flox/flox;Smad5flox/flox;Lactoferrin-cre, "Smad1/5 cKO"). Histological analysis of the reproductive tracts showed that Smad1/5 cKO mice were developmentally normal and displayed no defects in glandular morphology. In fertility analyses, single SMAD1 or SMAD5 deletion had no effect on fertility; however, double-conditional deletion of SMAD1 and SMAD5 resulted in severe subfertility. Timed mating analyses revealed endometrial receptivity defects in the Smad1/5 cKO mice beginning at 3.5 days post coitum (dpc) that perturbed embryo implantation at 4.5 dpc, as demonstrated by the detection of unattached blastocysts in the uterus, decreased COX2 expression, and FOXO1 cytoplasmic mislocalization. We also found that defects that arose during peri-implantation adversely affected embryonic and decidual development at 5.5 and 6.5 dpc. Thus, uterine epithelial BMP/SMAD1/5 signaling is essential during early pregnancy and SMAD1/5 epithelial-specific deletion has detrimental effects on stromal cell decidualization and pregnancy development.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bone morphogenetic proteins; endometrium; estrogen; infertility; progesterone; uterus

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35383354      PMCID: PMC9049119          DOI: 10.1210/endocr/bqac043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Endocrinology        ISSN: 0013-7227            Impact factor:   5.051


  64 in total

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7.  Lactoferrin-iCre: a new mouse line to study uterine epithelial gene function.

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8.  Mouse embryos lacking Smad1 signals display defects in extra-embryonic tissues and germ cell formation.

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Review 9.  Miscarriage matters: the epidemiological, physical, psychological, and economic costs of early pregnancy loss.

Authors:  Siobhan Quenby; Ioannis D Gallos; Rima K Dhillon-Smith; Marcelina Podesek; Mary D Stephenson; Joanne Fisher; Jan J Brosens; Jane Brewin; Rosanna Ramhorst; Emma S Lucas; Rajiv C McCoy; Robert Anderson; Shahd Daher; Lesley Regan; Maya Al-Memar; Tom Bourne; David A MacIntyre; Raj Rai; Ole B Christiansen; Mayumi Sugiura-Ogasawara; Joshua Odendaal; Adam J Devall; Phillip R Bennett; Stavros Petrou; Arri Coomarasamy
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10.  Evidence from normal expression and targeted misexpression that bone morphogenetic protein (Bmp-4) plays a role in mouse embryonic lung morphogenesis.

Authors:  S Bellusci; R Henderson; G Winnier; T Oikawa; B L Hogan
Journal:  Development       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 6.868

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  1 in total

1.  BMP/SMAD1/5 Signaling in the Endometrial Epithelium Is Essential for Receptivity and Early Pregnancy.

Authors:  Suni Tang; Dominique I Cope; Yasmin M Vasquez; Diana Monsivais
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2022-05-01       Impact factor: 5.051

  1 in total

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