The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Natural selection of human embryos: decidualizing endometrial stromal cells serve as sensors of embryo quality upon implantation

Natural selection of human embryos: decidualizing endometrial stromal cells serve as sensors of embryo quality upon implantation
Natural selection of human embryos: decidualizing endometrial stromal cells serve as sensors of embryo quality upon implantation
Background

Pregnancy is widely viewed as dependent upon an intimate dialogue, mediated by locally secreted factors between a developmentally competent embryo and a receptive endometrium. Reproductive success in humans is however limited, largely because of the high prevalence of chromosomally abnormal preimplantation embryos. Moreover, the transient period of endometrial receptivity in humans uniquely coincides with differentiation of endometrial stromal cells (ESCs) into highly specialized decidual cells, which in the absence of pregnancy invariably triggers menstruation. The role of cyclic decidualization of the endometrium in the implantation process and the nature of the decidual cytokines and growth factors that mediate the crosstalk with the embryo are unknown.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We employed a human co-culture model, consisting of decidualizing ESCs and single hatched blastocysts, to identify the soluble factors involved in implantation. Over the 3-day co-culture period, approximately 75% of embryos arrested whereas the remainder showed normal development. The levels of 14 implantation factors secreted by the stromal cells were determined by multiplex immunoassay. Surprisingly, the presence of a developing embryo had no significant effect on decidual secretions, apart from a modest reduction in IL-5 levels. In contrast, arresting embryos triggered a strong response, characterized by selective inhibition of IL-1?, -6, -10, -17, -18, eotaxin, and HB-EGF secretion. Co-cultures were repeated with undifferentiated ESCs but none of the secreted cytokines were affected by the presence of a developing or arresting embryo.

Conclusions

Human ESCs become biosensors of embryo quality upon differentiation into decidual cells. In view of the high incidence of gross chromosomal errors in human preimplantation embryos, cyclic decidualization followed by menstrual shedding may represent a mechanism of natural embryo selection that limits maternal investment in developmentally impaired pregnancies.
1932-6203
e10258
Teklenburg, Gijs
fa31dd22-a287-4414-b255-177f5a080b03
Salker, Madhuri
f64ad83e-6d95-4219-9212-e9fe642c079c
Molokhia, Mariam
d51b0eb4-72c3-4bb1-832c-384ef19c62a3
Lavery, Stuart
364f825b-baa9-47f0-8782-0ea4e339f590
Trew, Geoffrey
4a5683ee-e5d6-4dc2-b8da-b46c7347a379
Aojanepong, Tepchongchit
56e4a390-8bb8-4b7f-9eac-86dc1653cf6d
Mardon, Helen J.
fafe48b6-e8af-422b-b4c1-7bbc6788254b
Lokugamage, Amali U.
358c883c-25ea-46ef-9daa-5d96bd590b56
Rai, Raj
56b83037-80d8-4d5a-8d3f-3d13441012b8
Landles, Christian
e74396af-b8f8-49fa-8f78-ba9117f87de3
Roelen, Bernard A. J.
f92635f7-a923-40fc-9121-8fc05fda0f89
Quenby, Siobhan
aba70da9-95f8-4724-b604-695d4891ead0
Kuijk, Ewart W.
5817b868-fafd-4575-b5a5-7c0c15229331
Kavelaars, Annemieke
ab4a504e-74de-4c7b-86b4-acac8363cc77
Heijnen, Cobi J.
7327b3c6-a13d-4569-8a8a-f16dec3d9292
Regan, Jan J.
e8ac6988-fcdd-4ed0-94ec-f04faa7110ef
Macklon, Nick S.
7db1f4fc-a9f6-431f-a1f2-297bb8c9fb7e
Teklenburg, Gijs
fa31dd22-a287-4414-b255-177f5a080b03
Salker, Madhuri
f64ad83e-6d95-4219-9212-e9fe642c079c
Molokhia, Mariam
d51b0eb4-72c3-4bb1-832c-384ef19c62a3
Lavery, Stuart
364f825b-baa9-47f0-8782-0ea4e339f590
Trew, Geoffrey
4a5683ee-e5d6-4dc2-b8da-b46c7347a379
Aojanepong, Tepchongchit
56e4a390-8bb8-4b7f-9eac-86dc1653cf6d
Mardon, Helen J.
fafe48b6-e8af-422b-b4c1-7bbc6788254b
Lokugamage, Amali U.
358c883c-25ea-46ef-9daa-5d96bd590b56
Rai, Raj
56b83037-80d8-4d5a-8d3f-3d13441012b8
Landles, Christian
e74396af-b8f8-49fa-8f78-ba9117f87de3
Roelen, Bernard A. J.
f92635f7-a923-40fc-9121-8fc05fda0f89
Quenby, Siobhan
aba70da9-95f8-4724-b604-695d4891ead0
Kuijk, Ewart W.
5817b868-fafd-4575-b5a5-7c0c15229331
Kavelaars, Annemieke
ab4a504e-74de-4c7b-86b4-acac8363cc77
Heijnen, Cobi J.
7327b3c6-a13d-4569-8a8a-f16dec3d9292
Regan, Jan J.
e8ac6988-fcdd-4ed0-94ec-f04faa7110ef
Macklon, Nick S.
7db1f4fc-a9f6-431f-a1f2-297bb8c9fb7e

Teklenburg, Gijs, Salker, Madhuri, Molokhia, Mariam, Lavery, Stuart, Trew, Geoffrey, Aojanepong, Tepchongchit, Mardon, Helen J., Lokugamage, Amali U., Rai, Raj, Landles, Christian, Roelen, Bernard A. J., Quenby, Siobhan, Kuijk, Ewart W., Kavelaars, Annemieke, Heijnen, Cobi J., Regan, Jan J. and Macklon, Nick S. (2010) Natural selection of human embryos: decidualizing endometrial stromal cells serve as sensors of embryo quality upon implantation. PLoS ONE, 5 (4), e10258. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0010258).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Pregnancy is widely viewed as dependent upon an intimate dialogue, mediated by locally secreted factors between a developmentally competent embryo and a receptive endometrium. Reproductive success in humans is however limited, largely because of the high prevalence of chromosomally abnormal preimplantation embryos. Moreover, the transient period of endometrial receptivity in humans uniquely coincides with differentiation of endometrial stromal cells (ESCs) into highly specialized decidual cells, which in the absence of pregnancy invariably triggers menstruation. The role of cyclic decidualization of the endometrium in the implantation process and the nature of the decidual cytokines and growth factors that mediate the crosstalk with the embryo are unknown.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We employed a human co-culture model, consisting of decidualizing ESCs and single hatched blastocysts, to identify the soluble factors involved in implantation. Over the 3-day co-culture period, approximately 75% of embryos arrested whereas the remainder showed normal development. The levels of 14 implantation factors secreted by the stromal cells were determined by multiplex immunoassay. Surprisingly, the presence of a developing embryo had no significant effect on decidual secretions, apart from a modest reduction in IL-5 levels. In contrast, arresting embryos triggered a strong response, characterized by selective inhibition of IL-1?, -6, -10, -17, -18, eotaxin, and HB-EGF secretion. Co-cultures were repeated with undifferentiated ESCs but none of the secreted cytokines were affected by the presence of a developing or arresting embryo.

Conclusions

Human ESCs become biosensors of embryo quality upon differentiation into decidual cells. In view of the high incidence of gross chromosomal errors in human preimplantation embryos, cyclic decidualization followed by menstrual shedding may represent a mechanism of natural embryo selection that limits maternal investment in developmentally impaired pregnancies.

Other
fetchObject.action_uri=info_doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0010258&representation=PDF - Version of Record
Available under License Other.
Download (657kB)

More information

Published date: 21 April 2010
Organisations: Dev Origins of Health & Disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 150437
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/150437
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: c7b1fb8a-04e7-4b0b-858f-91ee6b554f41

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 06 May 2010 08:17
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:17

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Gijs Teklenburg
Author: Madhuri Salker
Author: Mariam Molokhia
Author: Stuart Lavery
Author: Geoffrey Trew
Author: Tepchongchit Aojanepong
Author: Helen J. Mardon
Author: Amali U. Lokugamage
Author: Raj Rai
Author: Christian Landles
Author: Bernard A. J. Roelen
Author: Siobhan Quenby
Author: Ewart W. Kuijk
Author: Annemieke Kavelaars
Author: Cobi J. Heijnen
Author: Jan J. Regan
Author: Nick S. Macklon

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×