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Publication : Transient {beta}2-adrenoceptor activation confers pregnancy loss by disrupting embryo spacing at implantation.

First Author  Chen Q Year  2011
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  286
Issue  6 Pages  4349-56
PubMed ID  21148315 Mgi Jnum  J:169482
Mgi Id  MGI:4941097 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M110.197202
Citation  Chen Q, et al. (2011) Transient {beta}2-adrenoceptor activation confers pregnancy loss by disrupting embryo spacing at implantation. J Biol Chem 286(6):4349-56
abstractText  Pregnancy loss is a serious social and medical issue, with one important cause associated with aberrant embryo implantation during early pregnancy. However, whether and how the process of embryo implantation is affected by environmental factors such as stress-induced sympathetic activation remained elusive. Here we report an unexpected, transient effect of beta(2)-adrenoreceptor (beta(2)-AR) activation (day 4 postcoitus) in disrupting embryo spacing at implantation, leading to substantially increased midterm pregnancy loss. The abnormal embryo spacing could be prevented by pretreatment of beta(2)-AR antagonist or genetic ablation of beta-AR. Similar beta(2)-AR activation at day 5 postcoitus, when implantation sites have been established, did not affect embryo spacing or pregnancy outcome, indicating that the adverse effect of beta(2)-AR activation is limited to the preimplantation period before embryo attachment. In vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that the transient beta(2)-AR activation abolished normal preimplantation uterine contractility without adversely affecting blastocyst quality. The contractility inhibition is mediated by activation of the cAMP-PKA pathway and accompanied by specific down-regulation of lpa3, a gene previously found to be critical for uterine contraction and embryo spacing. These results indicated that normal uterine contraction-mediated correct intrauterine embryo distribution is crucial for successful ongoing pregnancy. Abnormal beta(2)-AR activation at early pregnancy provided a molecular clue in explaining how maternal stress at early stages could adversely affect the pregnancy outcome.
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