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Uterine Rbpj is required for embryonic-uterine orientation and decidual remodeling via Notch pathway-independent and -dependent mechanisms.

Authors :
Zhang, Shuang
Kong, Shuangbo
Wang, Bingyan
Cheng, Xiaohong
Chen, Yongjie
Wu, Weiwei
Wang, Qiang
Shi, Junchao
Zhang, Ying
Wang, Shumin
Lu, Jinhua
Lydon, John P
DeMayo, Francesco
Pear, Warren S
Han, Hua
Lin, Haiyan
Li, Lei
Wang, Hongmei
Wang, Yan-ling
Li, Bing
Source :
Cell Research; Aug2014, Vol. 24 Issue 8, p925-942, 18p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Coordinated uterine-embryonic axis formation and decidual remodeling are hallmarks of mammalian post-implantation embryo development. Embryonic-uterine orientation is determined at initial implantation and synchronized with decidual development. However, the molecular mechanisms controlling these events remain elusive despite its discovery a long time ago. In the present study, we found that uterine-specific deletion of Rbpj, the nuclear transducer of Notch signaling, resulted in abnormal embryonic-uterine orientation and decidual patterning at post-implantation stages, leading to substantial embryo loss. We further revealed that prior to embryo attachment, Rbpj confers on-time uterine lumen shape transformation via physically interacting with uterine estrogen receptor (ERĪ±) in a Notch pathway-independent manner, which is essential for the initial establishment of embryo orientation in alignment with uterine axis. While at post-implantation stages, Rbpj directly regulates the expression of uterine matrix metalloproteinase in a Notch pathway-dependent manner, which is required for normal post-implantation decidual remodeling. These results demonstrate that uterine Rbpj is essential for normal embryo development via instructing the initial embryonic-uterine orientation and ensuring normal decidual patterning in a stage-specific manner. Our data also substantiate the concept that normal mammalian embryonic-uterine orientation requires proper guidance from developmentally controlled uterine signaling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10010602
Volume :
24
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cell Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
97316187
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/cr.2014.82