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Effects of estradiol, progesterone or cAMP on expression of PGRMC1 and progesterone receptor in a xenograft model of human endometrium and in endometrial cell culture. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Estradiol and progesterone are essential hormones for regulating the menstrual cycle and affecting the functionality of the endometrium, particularly during blastocyst implantation.
  • Dysregulated progesterone responses may lead to reproductive issues, including uterine bleeding and endometriosis, and involve pathways beyond the traditional nuclear receptor, like PGRMC1.
  • The study found a relationship between the expressions of PGR and PGRMC1 during certain menstrual phases but noted no significant changes in PGRMC1 expression in response to ovarian steroids, indicating limited understanding of its regulatory mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Estradiol and progesterone are key regulators of the menstrual cycle. In the human endometrium, progesterone induces morphological changes required for blastocyst implantation. Dysregulated response to progesterone can lead to endometrial pathologies including uterine bleeding and endometriosis. Besides the canonical nuclear progesterone receptor (encoded by the PGR gene), alternative response pathways include Progesterone Receptor Membrane Component 1 (PGRMC1), suspected to be involved in pathogenesis of endometrial diseases. We previously reported the spatiotemporal profile of PGRMC1 expression in the human endometrium along the menstrual cycle, highlighting progressive increase and decrease during the proliferative and secretory phases, respectively. Here we directly addressed its regulation by estradiol and progesterone, with systematic comparison with regulation of PGR expression. We found a direct correlation between expression of both genes during the proliferative and secretory phases in the cycling endometrium, but not during the menstrual phase. In a xenograft model mimicking the cycle phases, estradiol significantly increased and progesterone significantly decreased PGR expression but changes were not significant for PGRMC1. Finally, we did not find any significant effect of the ovarian steroids on expression of PGR or PGRMC1 in primary culture of endometrial stromal cells, except for a small increase in PGR expression by estradiol. Altogether, our experiments do not allow a major advance in our understanding of the mechanisms of cyclic variation of PGRMC1 expression, in particular regarding potential regulation by the ovarian steroids.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.steroids.2023.109284DOI Listing

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