Title of article
The Effect of Leptin on Mouse Trophoblast Cell Invasion
Author/Authors
Schulz، Laura C. نويسنده , , Widmaier، Eric P. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-1962
From page
1963
To page
0
Abstract
The hormone leptin is produced by adipose tissue and can function as a signal of nutritional status to the reproductive system. The expression of leptin receptor and, in some species, leptin, in the placenta suggests a role for leptin in placental development, but this role has not been elucidated. Leptin is required at the time of embryo implantation in the leptin-deficient ob/ ob mouse and has been shown to upregulate expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), enzymes involved in trophoblast invasion, in cultured human trophoblast cells. This led us to the hypothesis that leptin promotes the invasiveness of trophoblast cells crucial to placental development. We found that leptin stimulated mouse trophoblast cell invasion through a matrigel-coated insert on Day 10, but not Day 18 of pregnancy. Optimal stimulation occurred at a concentration of 50 ng/ml leptin, similar to the peak plasma leptin concentration during pregnancy in the mouse. Leptin treatment did not stimulate proliferation of mouse trophoblast cells in primary culture. Leptin stimulation of invasion was prevented by 25 µM GM6001, an inhibitor of MMP activity. Our results suggest that leptin may play a role in the establishment of the placenta during early pregnancy and that this function is dependent on MMP activity. This effect of leptin may represent one mechanism by which body condition affects placental development.
Keywords
Gene regulation , spermatid , spermatogenesis , testis , male reproductive tract
Journal title
Biology of Reproduction
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biology of Reproduction
Record number
88473
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