Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window
Successful implantation requires a functionally normal embryo at the blastocyst stage and a receptive endometrium as well as adequate communication between them throughout the implantation process. This cross-talk is highly regulated by a number of different kinds of molecules. Particularly, chemoki...
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Acceso en línea: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19450494_v1E_n1_p288_Fraccaroli |
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todo:paper_19450494_v1E_n1_p288_Fraccaroli2023-10-03T16:37:04Z Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window Fraccaroli, L. Alfieri, J. Leiros, C.P. Ramhorst, R. Chemokines Pregnancy Recurrent spontaneous abortions Review Tolerance chemokine immunologic factor RANTES cytology drug effect endometrium female fetomaternal transfusion histocompatibility human immunology metabolism nidation pregnancy recurrent abortion review T lymphocyte Abortion, Habitual Chemokine CCL5 Chemokines Embryo Implantation Endometrium Female Histocompatibility, Maternal-Fetal Humans Immunologic Factors Maternal-Fetal Exchange Pregnancy T-Lymphocytes Successful implantation requires a functionally normal embryo at the blastocyst stage and a receptive endometrium as well as adequate communication between them throughout the implantation process. This cross-talk is highly regulated by a number of different kinds of molecules. Particularly, chemokines-small polypeptides that attract specific leukocyte subsets by binding to cellsurface receptors- are also required to maintain immuneprivileged sites as the feto-maternal interface. Chemokines expression involves an interdependent network with the absence of a single chemokine affecting the expression of multiple other chemokines, we have chosen to focus on just two representative examples: RANTES (regulated on normal T cell expressed and secreted) and MCP-1 (Monocyte chemo-attractant protein). Here, we present updated information on their expression levels and regulation on three different levels: 1) systemic effects on maternal allogeneic response; 2) local effects on endometrial cells; and 3) during an early stage of the feto-maternal dialogue. For each of the three levels, we analyzed data from both fertile women and patients having experienced recurrent spontaneous abortions as representative of physiological and pathological situations respectively. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19450494_v1E_n1_p288_Fraccaroli |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
Chemokines Pregnancy Recurrent spontaneous abortions Review Tolerance chemokine immunologic factor RANTES cytology drug effect endometrium female fetomaternal transfusion histocompatibility human immunology metabolism nidation pregnancy recurrent abortion review T lymphocyte Abortion, Habitual Chemokine CCL5 Chemokines Embryo Implantation Endometrium Female Histocompatibility, Maternal-Fetal Humans Immunologic Factors Maternal-Fetal Exchange Pregnancy T-Lymphocytes |
spellingShingle |
Chemokines Pregnancy Recurrent spontaneous abortions Review Tolerance chemokine immunologic factor RANTES cytology drug effect endometrium female fetomaternal transfusion histocompatibility human immunology metabolism nidation pregnancy recurrent abortion review T lymphocyte Abortion, Habitual Chemokine CCL5 Chemokines Embryo Implantation Endometrium Female Histocompatibility, Maternal-Fetal Humans Immunologic Factors Maternal-Fetal Exchange Pregnancy T-Lymphocytes Fraccaroli, L. Alfieri, J. Leiros, C.P. Ramhorst, R. Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
topic_facet |
Chemokines Pregnancy Recurrent spontaneous abortions Review Tolerance chemokine immunologic factor RANTES cytology drug effect endometrium female fetomaternal transfusion histocompatibility human immunology metabolism nidation pregnancy recurrent abortion review T lymphocyte Abortion, Habitual Chemokine CCL5 Chemokines Embryo Implantation Endometrium Female Histocompatibility, Maternal-Fetal Humans Immunologic Factors Maternal-Fetal Exchange Pregnancy T-Lymphocytes |
description |
Successful implantation requires a functionally normal embryo at the blastocyst stage and a receptive endometrium as well as adequate communication between them throughout the implantation process. This cross-talk is highly regulated by a number of different kinds of molecules. Particularly, chemokines-small polypeptides that attract specific leukocyte subsets by binding to cellsurface receptors- are also required to maintain immuneprivileged sites as the feto-maternal interface. Chemokines expression involves an interdependent network with the absence of a single chemokine affecting the expression of multiple other chemokines, we have chosen to focus on just two representative examples: RANTES (regulated on normal T cell expressed and secreted) and MCP-1 (Monocyte chemo-attractant protein). Here, we present updated information on their expression levels and regulation on three different levels: 1) systemic effects on maternal allogeneic response; 2) local effects on endometrial cells; and 3) during an early stage of the feto-maternal dialogue. For each of the three levels, we analyzed data from both fertile women and patients having experienced recurrent spontaneous abortions as representative of physiological and pathological situations respectively. |
format |
JOUR |
author |
Fraccaroli, L. Alfieri, J. Leiros, C.P. Ramhorst, R. |
author_facet |
Fraccaroli, L. Alfieri, J. Leiros, C.P. Ramhorst, R. |
author_sort |
Fraccaroli, L. |
title |
Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
title_short |
Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
title_full |
Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
title_fullStr |
Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
title_full_unstemmed |
Immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
title_sort |
immunomodulatory effects of chemokines during the early implantation window |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_19450494_v1E_n1_p288_Fraccaroli |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT fraccarolil immunomodulatoryeffectsofchemokinesduringtheearlyimplantationwindow AT alfierij immunomodulatoryeffectsofchemokinesduringtheearlyimplantationwindow AT leiroscp immunomodulatoryeffectsofchemokinesduringtheearlyimplantationwindow AT ramhorstr immunomodulatoryeffectsofchemokinesduringtheearlyimplantationwindow |
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1782027684448043008 |