S. Athanasasplatsis et al., A MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODY TO AN EARLY-PREGNANCY FACTOR-INDUCED SUPPRESSORFACTOR (EPF-S-1) DISRUPTS IMPLANTATION IN MICE, American journal of reproductive immunology [1989], 33(3), 1995, pp. 259-266
PROBLEM: The importance of EPF during pregnancy has been established p
reviously but the importance of the EPF-induced suppressor factor EPF-
S-1 in pregnancy has to date been unaddressed. Investigations were the
refore conducted in order to study this. METHOD: Monoclonal antibodies
to EPF-S-1 were produced, and one antibody, designated R2T gamma, was
characterized. Mated mice were passively immunized with R2T gamma and
the effect on implantation determined. RESULTS: Characterization of a
nti-EPF-S-1 R2T gamma revealed that it cross-reacted with EPF-S-1 of d
ifferent MHC restriction but not with EPF or EPF-S-2. When injected in
to mated mice on days 1 to 4, R2T gamma had no effect on pregnancy but
when injections continued to day 5, pregnancy was affected; the numbe
r of embryos implanted on day 7 were significantly less than the numbe
r of corpora lutea counted, signifying embryonic loss. CONCLUSION: The
se studies show that anti-EPF-S-1 R2T gamma disrupts implantation in m
ice when injected on days 1 to 5 of pregnancy but not when injected on
days 1 to 4, demonstrating that EPF-S-1 exerts its effects around the
time of implantation.