Litcius/Paper detail

Spatial and molecular anatomy of the endometrium during embryo implantation: a current overview of key regulators of blastocyst invasion

Shun Akaeda, Shizu Aikawa, Yasushi Hirota

2024FEBS Journal21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Embryo implantation is composed of three steps: blastocyst apposition, adhesion/attachment and invasion. Blastocyst invasion has been studied less extensively than the other two events. Historically, studies conducted using electron microscopy have shown the removal of epithelial cells in the vicinity of the attached blastocysts in rodents, although the underlying mechanisms have remained unclear. Here, we describe recent studies using mice with uterine-specific gene deletion that demonstrated important roles for nuclear proteins such as progesterone receptor, hypoxia inducible factor and retinoblastoma in the regulation of embryo invasion. In these mouse models, the detachment of the endometrial luminal epithelium, decidualization in the stroma, and the activation of trophoblasts have been found to be important in ensuring embryo invasion. This review summarizes the molecular signaling associated with these cellular events, mainly evidenced by mouse models.

Topics & Concepts

DecidualizationBlastocystAppositionEmbryoEndometriumCell biologyBiologyStromaAndrologyUterusAnatomyEndocrinologyEmbryogenesisImmunologyMedicineImmunohistochemistryReproductive System and PregnancyEndometriosis Research and TreatmentReproductive Biology and Fertility