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Publication : Maternal ghrelin deficiency compromises reproduction in female progeny through altered uterine developmental programming.

First Author  Martin JR Year  2011
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  152
Issue  5 Pages  2060-6
PubMed ID  21325042 Mgi Jnum  J:173861
Mgi Id  MGI:5050461 Doi  10.1210/en.2010-1485
Citation  Martin JR, et al. (2011) Maternal ghrelin deficiency compromises reproduction in female progeny through altered uterine developmental programming. Endocrinology 152(5):2060-6
abstractText  Ghrelin has a well-known role in the regulation of appetite, satiety, energy metabolism, and reproduction; however ghrelin has not been implicated in reproductive tract development. We examined the effect of ghrelin deficiency on the developmental programming of female fertility. We observed that female wild-type mice born of ghrelin heterozygote dams (i.e. exposed in utero to ghrelin deficiency) had diminished fertility and produced smaller litters. We demonstrate that exposure to in utero ghrelin deficiency led to altered developmental programming of the reproductive tract. The number of ovarian follicles, corpora lutea, and embryos produced were identical in both exposed and unexposed mice. However wild-type embryos transferred to uteri of mice exposed to in utero ghrelin deficiency had a 60% reduction in the rate of embryo implantation compared with those transferred to wild-type unexposed uteri. We identified significant alterations in the uterine expression of four genes critical for implantation and a defect in uterine endometrial proliferation. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the mechanism of subfertility was abnormal endometrial function. In utero exposure to decreased levels of ghrelin led to defects in developmental programming of the uterus and subsequent subfertility in wild-type offspring.
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