DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION AND LOCALIZATION OF INTEGRINS AND CD44 IN THEMEMBRANE DOMAINS OF HUMAN UTERINE EPITHELIAL-CELLS DURING THE MENSTRUAL-CYCLE

Citation
A. Albers et al., DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION AND LOCALIZATION OF INTEGRINS AND CD44 IN THEMEMBRANE DOMAINS OF HUMAN UTERINE EPITHELIAL-CELLS DURING THE MENSTRUAL-CYCLE, Acta anatomica, 153(1), 1995, pp. 12-19
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Anatomy & Morphology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00015180
Volume
153
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
12 - 19
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-5180(1995)153:1<12:DEALOI>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Human uterine epithelium displays a distinctly polarized organization with basal, lateral, and apical plasma membrane domains. Although nona dhesive throughout most of the menstrual cycle, uterine epithelial cel ls allow attachment of trophoblast cells to their apical pole during e mbryo implantation. Development of the receptive state might involve e xpression of cell adhesion molecules and/or redistribution of such mol ecules with respect to their localization at the basal, lateral, and a pical membrane domains of cells. Expression and distribution of alpha 1-, alpha 3-, alpha 5-, alpha 6-, beta 1-, beta 3- and beta 4-integrin subunits as well as of CD44 were examined in the luminal epithelium o f human endometrium by immunohistochemistry in different phases of the menstrual cycle. The luminal epithelium was found to express alpha 1- , alpha 3-, alpha 6-, beta 1-, beta 4-integrin subunits and CD44. alph a 6-integrin subunits and CD44 displayed cycle dependency. The alpha 6 -integrin subunits were detected in the basal membrane domains in all phases, However, in correlation with increasing expression during the secretory phase of cycle, these subunits newly appeared in the lateral membranes of epithelial cells. CD44 showed increased expression in th e secretory phase but was always restricted to the lateral membranes. The conspicuous behavior of alpha 6-integrin subunits and CD44 is disc ussed with respect to its possible functional significance for embryo implantation, and in relation to a hypothesis postulating that steroid -controlled master genes direct the acquisition of the receptive state of the luminal uterine epithelium by changing elements of the apicoba sal polarity of these cells.