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The human endometrium as a sensor of embryo quality

The human endometrium as a sensor of embryo quality
The human endometrium as a sensor of embryo quality
Human reproduction is characterized by a high degree of embryo wastage, which is largely ascribed to a high prevalence of embryo aneuploidy. It is proposed that maternal strategies have evolved that prevent inappropriate investment in invasive, but poorly viable embryos. Key to this is the emerging concept of the endometrium as biosensor, first identified in human in vitro embryo/decidualized stromal cell coculture systems and recently confirmed in an in vivo mouse model. In this review, the growing supporting experimental evidence for the biosensor component of decidualized endometrium is outlined, and recent insights into the nature of the embryo-derived signal detected by the endometrium and the biological processes by which this signal is thought to be converted into a go or no-go endometrial response are described. Finally, the clinical implications of this new paradigm of the choosy uterus are addressed.
1-8
Macklon, N.S.
7db1f4fc-a9f6-431f-a1f2-297bb8c9fb7e
Brosens, J.J.
35574451-937b-4618-a94c-9509ec9150e1
Macklon, N.S.
7db1f4fc-a9f6-431f-a1f2-297bb8c9fb7e
Brosens, J.J.
35574451-937b-4618-a94c-9509ec9150e1

Macklon, N.S. and Brosens, J.J. (2014) The human endometrium as a sensor of embryo quality. Biology of Reproduction, 91 (4), 1-8. (doi:10.1095/biolreprod.114.122846). (PMID:25187529)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Human reproduction is characterized by a high degree of embryo wastage, which is largely ascribed to a high prevalence of embryo aneuploidy. It is proposed that maternal strategies have evolved that prevent inappropriate investment in invasive, but poorly viable embryos. Key to this is the emerging concept of the endometrium as biosensor, first identified in human in vitro embryo/decidualized stromal cell coculture systems and recently confirmed in an in vivo mouse model. In this review, the growing supporting experimental evidence for the biosensor component of decidualized endometrium is outlined, and recent insights into the nature of the embryo-derived signal detected by the endometrium and the biological processes by which this signal is thought to be converted into a go or no-go endometrial response are described. Finally, the clinical implications of this new paradigm of the choosy uterus are addressed.

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Published date: 3 September 2014
Organisations: Human Development & Health

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Local EPrints ID: 370791
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370791
PURE UUID: 600f94d4-4e17-4596-8d84-4283bc8475e7

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Date deposited: 06 Nov 2014 13:30
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:22

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Contributors

Author: N.S. Macklon
Author: J.J. Brosens

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