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Reproduction, Fertility and Development Reproduction, Fertility and Development Society
Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Genes involved in implantation

Lois A. Salamonsen, Guiying Nie, Eva Dimitriadis, Lorraine Robb and Jock K. Findlay

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 13(1) 41 - 49
Published: 2001

Abstract

The endometrium is normally a hostile environment for an embryo, except for a short phase in each reproductive cycle known as the ‘window of receptivity’. The precise molecular events involved in this transformation are not well understood. Application of state-of-the-art techniques of the 1990s has identified some of the genes involved, which are reviewed here. Mice with a null mutation in either the gene for leukemia inhibitory factor or the interleukin-11 receptor α chain are infertile, owing in both cases to a failure of embryo implantation. Both of these genes are expressed in the human endometrium with patterns suggesting a role in human fertility. The technique of RNA differential display has been applied to a comparison of the expression of genes at implantation sites v. inter-implantation sites in the mouse uterus on the first day of implantation, and has defined additional genes whose products may be important for this process. Among these are the calcium-binding protein D9K, the monoclonal non-specific suppressor factor β , and the splicing factor SC35. The major challenge is to determine whether manipulation of such genes can increase or decrease endometrial receptivity in humans.

Keywords: calbindin-D9k, interleukin-11, leukemia inhibitory factor, monoclonal non-specific suppressor factor β , splicing factor SC35.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RD00046

© CSIRO 2001

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