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Volume 83, Issue 1, Pages 79-84 (December 2009)


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Cellular and molecular regulation of mammalian blastocyst hatching

Polani B. SeshagiriCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Shubhendu Sen Roy, Garimella Sireesha, Rajnish P. Rao

Received 11 March 2009; received in revised form 7 May 2009; accepted 21 June 2009. published online 19 October 2009.

Abstract 

In mammals including humans, failure in blastocyst hatching and implantation leads to early embryonic loss and infertility. Prior to implantation, the blastocyst must hatch out of its acellular glycoprotein coat, the zona pellucida (ZP). The phenomenon of blastocyst hatching is believed to be regulated by (i) dynamic cellular components such as actin-based trophectodermal projections (TEPs), and (ii) a variety of autocrine and paracrine molecules such as growth factors, cytokines and proteases. The spatio-temporal regulation of zona lysis by blastocyst-derived cellular and molecular signaling factors is being keenly investigated. Our studies show that hamster blastocyst hatching is accelerated by growth factors such as heparin binding-epidermal growth factor and leukemia inhibitory factor and that embryo-derived, cysteine proteases including cathepsins are responsible for blastocyst hatching. Additionally, we believe that cyclooxygenase-generated prostaglandins, estradiol-17β mediated estrogen receptor-α signaling and possibly NFκB could be involved in peri-hatching development. Moreover, we show that TEPs are intimately involved with lysing ZP and that the TEPs potentially enrich and harbor hatching-enabling factors. These observations provide new insights into our understanding of the key cellular and molecular regulators involved in the phenomenon of mammalian blastocyst hatching, which is essential for the establishment of early pregnancy.

Department of Molecular Reproduction, Development and Genetics, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560012, India

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +91 80 309 2687; fax: +91 80 360 0999.

PII: S0165-0378(09)00473-2

doi:10.1016/j.jri.2009.06.264


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