EFFECTS OF SENSORY STIMULI ON THE INCIDENCE OF FETAL RESORPTION IN A MURINE MODEL OF SPONTANEOUS-ABORTION - THE PRESENCE OF AN ALIEN MALE AND POSTIMPLANTATION EMBRYO SURVIVAL
Mg. Baines et al., EFFECTS OF SENSORY STIMULI ON THE INCIDENCE OF FETAL RESORPTION IN A MURINE MODEL OF SPONTANEOUS-ABORTION - THE PRESENCE OF AN ALIEN MALE AND POSTIMPLANTATION EMBRYO SURVIVAL, Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 102(1), 1994, pp. 221-228
Pregnancy outcome may be altered by both genetic and environmental fac
tors. The mating of CBA/J female mice with DBA/2 males normally result
s in pregnancies characterized by a relatively high incidence of early
embryo loss compared with most other syngeneic or allogeneic matings.
This study addressed the role of normal laboratory stress in the indu
ction of early embryo loss. The previously studied 'Bruce effect' desc
ribes the total loss of preimplantation embryos (pregnancy block) that
is apparently caused by the stress induced by the presence of an alie
n male and mediated by neuroimmunological effects on prolactin activit
y. To determine whether this effect could be responsible for the high
incidence of postimplantation embryo losses in the CBA/J x DBA/2 model
, the original DBA/2 male was replaced on day 6 of gestation by anothe
r DBA/2 male, a CBA/b a C57Bl/6 or a BALB/c male. The relatively high
incidence of embryo loss was not affected by removing the original DBA
/2 male or introducing another DBA/2 or a CBA/J male, indicating that
stress induced by an alien male did not increase the postimplantation
losses in this model. Furthermore, the introduction of a DBA/2 male to
a CBA/J female that had been mated with a BALB/c male did not elicit
early embryo loss. However, the replacement of the original DBA/2 male
by a BALB/c male dramatically reduced the incidence of early embryo l
oss in pregnant CBA/J female mice. The introduction of a C57Bl/6 male
also reduced embryo loss but to a lesser extent. Furthermore, this eff
ect was shown to be independent of the testes and was induced by facto
rs present in the bedding from cages in which BALB/c male mice had bee
n housed. The presence of the BALB/c male in the cage with the pregnan
t CBA/J female resulted in a significant reduction in the infiltration
of uterine implantation sites by maternal macrophages, coincident wit
h a reduction in early embryo losses. These studies therefore show tha
t the maternal cell-mediated immune response in the uterus to the feta
l graft is altered, apparently by pheromonal messages derived from the
resident male. The introduction of an alien BALB/c male to a pregnant
CBA/J female after implantation of CBA/J x DBA/2 embryos had occurred
, while unable to alter the fetal genotype, apparently altered the mat
ernal uterine cellular response and had a profound effect on pregnancy
outcome.