Infertility
researchers identify one gene's critical role in the
human embryo implantation process
Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and the
University of California at Los Angeles recently conducted
a study of the molecular mechanism involved in the human
implantation process, specifically targeting the role
of one gene in the success of an embryo to implant itself
in the endometrium, the inner lining of the uterus.
"There have been studies done both in the United
States and Europe showing statistically that there is
a defect in the implantation process in women with endometriosis,
a condition affecting many premenopausal women who also
suffer from infertility," explains Lee-Chuan Kao,
MD, PhD, a reproductive medicine specialist at Cedars-Sinai
and co-director of the hospital's Center for Reproductive
Medicine. "My interest was to determine exactly
the molecular mechanism responsible for implantation
failure."
In this recent study, Kao, working with Margareta Pisarska,
MD, co-director of Cedars-Sinai's Center for Reproductive
Medicine, and Salma Khan, PhD, also of Cedars-Sinai,
focused on one specific endometrial target gene (GlcNAc-6-OST)
which has a role in shaping L-selectin ligand, a chemical
responsible for the tethering and rolling mechanism
described at the human maternal-fetal interface, ie.
a signal that enables the embryo to recognize the lining
of the endometrium.
"This gene (GlcNAc-6-OST) gets transcribed and
then translated into a protein and this particular protein
functions as an enzyme," explains Kao. "It
has been shown to be expressed specifically during the
window of implantation. My hypothesis is that this particular
gene, for a yet-to-be-uncovered reason, is abnormally
expressed in women with endometriosis which results
in the embryo not being able to find the appropriate
place to bind to the endometrium leading to a failure
or defect in the implantation process."
The in-vitro study tested whether ovarian hormones,
oestrogen and progesterone, can regulate the expression
of GlcNAc-6-OST. By treating an endometrial cell line
with the ovarian hormones, Kao and his colleagues demonstrated
that increasing oestrogen during the first part of the
menstrual cycle, when ovarian follicles mature to prepare
for ovulation, increases the expression of the enzyme.
After ovulation, progesterone production further heightens
the expression of the enzyme. This up-regulation of
the enzyme (when both oestrogen and progesterone are
present) facilitates the production of L-selectin ligand
which enables implantation. When only progesterone was
present without estrogen, the gene was suppressed and
the endometrium would not be receptive to implantation.
"Our next step," says Kao, "will be to
explore other regulatory mechanisms or other chemicals
- instead of hormones - that might provide us with a
more specific approach to modulate this gene. Additional
studies are required before we can apply this information
to a clinical situation but I believe we've shown there
is definitely a need for more research."
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