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

Evidence against a significant role for mast cells in blastocyst implantation in the rat and mouse

LA Salamonsen, M Jeziorska, GF Newlands, SK Dey and DE Woolley

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8(8) 1157 - 1164
Published: 1996

Abstract

Rats were treated with the highly potent stabilizer of mast cells, FPL 55618, before and during the first seven days of pregnancy to establish whether stabilization of mast cells resulted in impaired blastocyst implantation. There was no significant reduction in either the number of ovulations or the number of implantation sites in treated rats compared with controls; 11 of 15 treated rats were pregnant compared with 5 of 6 control rats. The distribution of mast cells was examined in uterine tissues, implantation sites and interimplantation sites in both rats and mice using highly sensitive immunohistochemical techniques. Virtually all of the mast cells in rat uterine tissue stained for rat mast cell protease-I (RMCP-I; connective tissue type), whereas few stained for RMCP-II (mucosal type). Most of the mast cells were present in the myometrium with very sparse distribution in the endometrium and there were no differences in numbers of mast cells between implantation and inter-implantation sites on Day 7 of pregnancy. In tissue sections of mouse uteri sampled from Day 1 to Day 8 of pregnancy there were virtually no mast cells in the endometrium or deciduum adjacent to implantation sites. Mouse uterine mast cells also stained predominantly for the connective tissue-type mast cell protease MMCP-4, the murine equivalent of RMCP-I. Thus, mast cells and their products appear to play little, if any, role in blastocyst implantation in murid rodents. Since mast cells are a prominent feature of human endometrium, this study emphasizes the important consideration of species differences when choosing animal models for implantation studies.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9961157

© CSIRO 1996

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