CYTOKINES IN MAMMALIAN REPRODUCTION AND SPECULATION ABOUT THEIR POSSIBLE INVOLVEMENT IN NONMAMMALIAN VIVIPARITY

Authors
Citation
L. Paulesu, CYTOKINES IN MAMMALIAN REPRODUCTION AND SPECULATION ABOUT THEIR POSSIBLE INVOLVEMENT IN NONMAMMALIAN VIVIPARITY, Microscopy research and technique, 38(1-2), 1997, pp. 188-194
Citations number
79
Categorie Soggetti
Microscopy,Biology
ISSN journal
1059910X
Volume
38
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
188 - 194
Database
ISI
SICI code
1059-910X(1997)38:1-2<188:CIMRAS>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
In recent years, the secretion of immunoregulatory factors (cytokines) at the maternofetal interface in mammals has been widely documented. Although cytokine production seems to be a specific phenomenon in mamm alian reproduction, the specific roles of these substances in differen t species are still not clear. However, a balance of different cytokin e activities appears to be crucial for regulation of the establishment and survival of the semiallogeneic embryo in maternal tissues. The ap parent immunological role of placental cytokines in the mechanisms of implantation and embryonic development in mammals has raised the quest ion of whether cytokines are also involved in the reproduction of nonm ammalian vertebrates. Our studies have shown that the production of cy tokines by the maternofetal unit is not limited to mammalian species, but that interleukin-1 (IL-1)alpha, IL-1 beta, and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) are secreted by the placenta of a viviparous s quamate reptile, Chalcides chalcides. Our finding of this parallelism between reptilian and mammalian reproduction suggests that immunologic al mechanisms, possibly mediated by the secretion of cytokines, played an important role in the evolution of viviparity. (C) 1997 Wiley-Liss , Inc.