Japanese society of Ova Research

Abstract

Vol.26 No.3

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Review
Molecular Mechanisms Associated with Conceptus-endometrium Interactions during the Peri-implantation Period in Ruminants
JMOR, 26(3) 98-110, 2009
DOI: 10.1274/jmor.26.98
1Laboratory of Animal Breeding, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan
2Department of Animal Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA

In mammals, the establishment of pregnancy is dependent upon coordinated biochemical signaling and physical interactions between the developing conceptus and uterine endometrium. These essential forms of communication between the conceptus and its maternal environment result in continued production of progesterone from the corpus luteum (CL) and the initiation of implantation/placentation. During the peri-implantation period, conceptuses in ruminant ungulates secrete interferon-tau (IFNT), which acts on uterine endometrium and attenuates endometrial production of the luteolysin, prostaglandin F, resulting in the maintenance of CL function. Expression of the ovine IFNT (oIFNT) genes is restricted to the mononuclear cells of the trophoblast and the protein is produced for only a relatively short and discrete window of time during early pregnancy. This review deals with identification, characterization and regulation of IFNT gene transcription, and uterine responses associated with pregnancy establishment in ruminants.

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