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Publication : Effects of progranulin on blastocyst hatching and subsequent adhesion and outgrowth in the mouse.

First Author  Qin J Year  2005
Journal  Biol Reprod Volume  73
Issue  3 Pages  434-42
PubMed ID  15901638 Mgi Jnum  J:100669
Mgi Id  MGI:3589098 Doi  10.1095/biolreprod.105.040030
Citation  Qin J, et al. (2005) Effects of progranulin on blastocyst hatching and subsequent adhesion and outgrowth in the mouse. Biol Reprod 73(3):434-42
abstractText  Using cDNA microarray methodology, we have shown previously that transcripts of progranulin gene (Grn, also known as acrogranin), a recently identified autocrine growth factor, were upregulated in mouse blastocysts adhered to the filter membrane in an in vitro-culture system. In the present study, we investigated the expression and effects of progranulin on blastocyst hatching, adhesion, and embryo outgrowth during the peri-implantation period in the mouse. During this period, substantial amounts of Grn mRNA were present in both inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm. Progranulin was localized exclusively to the surface of the trophectoderm in early and pre- and postadhesion blastocysts as well as in trophoblast cells and ICM of outgrowth embryos, being secreted as a single, 88-kDa form into the surrounding medium. NIH3T3 cells that had been transfected with a progranulin expression construct secreted the 88-kDa form of the protein, from which a 68-kDa form could be generated by deglycosylation. In vitro treatment of blastocysts with recombinant progranulin promoted blastocyst hatching, adhesion, and outgrowth, whereas rabbit anti-mouse progranulin immunoglobulin G reduced the incidence of blastocyst hatching, adhesion, and outgrowth. Studies of bromodeoxyuridine incorporation and immunodissection of the ICM revealed that progranulin was effective on the trophectoderm but not on the ICM. These results indicate that progranulin is an important factor for the processes of blastocyst hatching, adhesion, and outgrowth, and they suggest that the effects of progranulin on blastocyst adhesion and outgrowth may have been triggered by the previous action of progranulin to induce hatching of the blastocysts.
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