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Endometrial stromal cells of women with recurrent miscarriage fail to discriminate between high- and low-quality human embryos. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Women with recurrent miscarriage (RM) may have impaired ability to differentiate between high- and low-quality embryos, leading to more frequent implantation failures.
  • In a study, endometrial stromal cells (H-EnSCs) from women with RM showed similar migration responses to both high- and low-quality embryos, while cells from fertile women were inhibited in migration when exposed to low-quality embryos.
  • The findings suggest that H-EnSCs from women with RM migrate more towards trophoblast spheroids, indicating a potential disruption in the normal embryo selection process which warrants further investigation.

Article Abstract

Background: The aetiology of recurrent miscarriage (RM) remains largely unexplained. Women with RM have a shorter time to pregnancy interval than normally fertile women, which may be due to more frequent implantation of non-viable embryos. We hypothesized that human endometrial stromal cells (H-EnSCs) of women with RM discriminate less effectively between high-and low-quality human embryos and migrate more readily towards trophoblast spheroids than H-EnSCs of normally fertile women.

Methodology/principal Findings: Monolayers of decidualized H-EnSCs were generated from endometrial biopsies of 6 women with RM and 6 fertile controls. Cell-free migration zones were created and the effect of the presence of a high-quality (day 5 blastocyst, n = 13), a low-quality (day 5 blastocyst with three pronuclei or underdeveloped embryo, n = 12) or AC-1M88 trophoblast cell line spheroid on H-ESC migratory activity was analyzed after 18 hours. In the absence of a spheroid or embryo, migration of H-EnSCs from fertile or RM women was similar. In the presence of a low-quality embryo in the zone, the migration of H-EnSCs of control women was inhibited compared to the basal migration in the absence of an embryo (P<0.05) and compared to the migration in the presence of high-quality embryo (p<0.01). Interestingly, the migratory response H-EnSCs of women with RM did not differ between high- and low-quality embryos. Furthermore, in the presence of a spheroid their migration was enhanced compared to the H-EnSCs of controls (p<0.001).

Conclusions: H-EnSCs of fertile women discriminate between high- and low-quality embryos whereas H-EnSCs of women with RM fail to do so. H-EnSCs of RM women have a higher migratory response to trophoblast spheroids. Future studies will focus on the mechanisms by which low-quality embryos inhibit the migration of H-EnSCs and how this is deregulated in women with RM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3405140PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0041424PLOS

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