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1 December 2005 Impairment of Decidualization in SRC-Deficient Mice
Aki Shimizu, Tetsuo Maruyama, Kayoko Tamaki, Hiroshi Uchida, Hironori Asada, Yasunori Yoshimura
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Abstract

Many signaling events induced by ovarian steroid hormones, cytokines, and growth factors are involved in the process of decidualization of human and rodent endometrium. We have reported previously that tyrosine kinase activation of SRC functionally participates in decidualization of human endometrial stromal cells. To address its essential role in decidualization, we examined, using wild-type and Src knockout mice, whether the process of decidualization was impaired in the absence of SRC. Immunohistochemistry using an antibody specific for the active form of SRC revealed that the active SRC was expressed prominently in the decidualizing stromal cells of the pregnant wild-type mouse. Moreover, the active SRC was upregulated in the uterine horn with artificially stimulated decidual reaction. In comparison with wild-type and Src heterozygous mice, the uterus of Src null mice showed no apparent decidual response following artificial stimulation. Ovarian steroid-induced decidualization in vitro, as determined by morphological changes and expression of decidual/trophoblast prolactin-related protein and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (also known as Cox2), both of which are decidualization markers, did not occur in a timely fashion in endometrial stromal cells isolated from the uteri of SRC-deficient mice compared to those from wild-type and Src heterozygous mice. Our results collectively suggest that SRC is an indispensable signaling component for maximal decidualization in mice.

Aki Shimizu, Tetsuo Maruyama, Kayoko Tamaki, Hiroshi Uchida, Hironori Asada, and Yasunori Yoshimura "Impairment of Decidualization in SRC-Deficient Mice," Biology of Reproduction 73(6), 1219-1227, (1 December 2005). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.105.041616
Received: 7 March 2005; Accepted: 1 August 2005; Published: 1 December 2005
KEYWORDS
decidua
estradiol
female reproductive tract
kinases
progesterone
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