Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2593747 Reproductive Toxicology 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Estrogen prepares the uterus for implantation and is highly conserved in mammals. However, administration of estrogen to pigs earlier than normal conceptus secretion is characterized by complete embryonic mortality by days 15–18. The objective of this study was to characterize the direct effects of early estrogen administration on uterine endometrial gene expression. The study evaluated the effects of estrogen when administered early on days 9 and 10 of the estrous cycle or day 11.5 which is the normal period of conceptus estrogen secretion in pigs. Uterine endometrium was removed either Day 13 or 15. Endometrial gene expression was evaluated using the GeneChip® Porcine Genome Array. Fifty-five candidate genes were successfully identified as differentially expressed due to aberrant estrogen exposure, and quantitative RT-PCR mRNA expression was supportive of the array data. These data provide insight into global uterine transcriptional changes associated with estrogen disruption of the endometrium.

► We evaluated effects of estrogen disruption on uterine endometrial gene expression. ► Fifty-five candidate genes were successfully identified as differentially expressed due to aberrant estrogen exposure. ► Analysis of associated pathways constructed from the raw microarray data provided valuable insight into the dysfunctional antigen presentation schemes due to early estrogen exposure. ► CXCL-11 mRNA increased 181-fold between day 13 and 15 of endocrine disrupted gilts.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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