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Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/en.2007-0321
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Endocrinology Vol. 148, No. 8 3922-3931
Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society

Tight and Adherens Junctions in the Ovine Uterus: Differential Regulation by Pregnancy and Progesterone

M. Carey Satterfield, Kathrin A. Dunlap, Kanako Hayashi, Robert C. Burghardt, Thomas E. Spencer and Fuller W. Bazer

Center for Animal Biotechnology and Genomics, Department of Animal Science (M.C.S., K.A.D., K.H., T.E.S., F.W.B.), and Image Analysis Laboratory, Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences (R.C.B.), Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Fuller W. Bazer, Center for Animal Biotechnology and Genomics, 442 Kleberg Center, 2471 TAMU, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-2471. E-mail: fbazer{at}cvm.tamu.edu.

In species with noninvasive implantation by conceptus trophectoderm, fetal/maternal communications occur across the endometrial epithelia. The present studies identified changes in junctional complexes in the ovine endometrium that regulate paracellular trafficking of water, ions, and other molecules, and the secretory capacity of the uterine epithelia. Distinct temporal and spatial alterations in occludin, tight junction protein 2, and claudin 1–4 proteins were observed in the endometrium of cyclic and early pregnant ewes. Dynamic changes in tight junction formation were characterized by an abundance of tight junction proteins on d 10 of the estrous cycle and pregnancy that substantially decreased by d 12. Early progesterone administration advanced conceptus development on d 9 and 12 that was associated with loss of tight-junction-associated proteins. Pregnancy increased tight-junction-associated proteins between d 14–16. Cadherin 1 and ß-catenin, which form adherens junctions, were abundant in the endometrial glands, but decreased after d 10 of pregnancy in the luminal epithelium and then increased by d 16 with the onset of implantation. Results support the ideas that progesterone elicits transient decreases in tight and adherens junctions in the endometrial luminal epithelium between d 10–12 that increases selective serum and tissue fluid transudation to enhance blastocyst elongation, which is subsequently followed by an increase in tight and adherens junctions between d 14–16 that may be required for attachment and adherence of the trophectoderm for implantation. The continuous presence of tight and adherens junctions in the uterine glands would allow for vectorial secretion of trophic substances required for conceptus elongation and survival.







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Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society