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Antagonists of embryo-derived platelet-activating factor act by inhibiting the ability of the mouse embryo to implant.
Authors:N R Spinks  J P Ryan  C O'Neill
Institution:Human Reproduction Unit, Royal North Shore Hospital of Sydney, St. Leonards, NSW, Australia.
Abstract:This study utilized the transfer of preimplantation embryos to pseudo-pregnant mice to determine whether PAF-antagonists act primarily on the maternal or embryonic components of implantation. The first experiment used reciprocal embryo transfers, in which blastocysts from mice treated with PAF antagonist (SRI 63-441) or saline (controls), from Days 1 to 4 of pregnancy, were transferred to Day-3 pseudo-pregnant recipients which were also treated with SRI 63-441 or saline on Days 1-4 of pregnancy. The antagonist (40 micrograms) was administered at 16:00 h on Day 1 and at 09:00 h on Days 2-4 of pregnancy. The percentage of the transferred embryos which implanted was determined on Day 8 of pregnancy. Treatment of the recipient or the donor female with SRI 63-441 resulted in a reduction in implantation rate, from a control level of 45% to 33.8% or 34.7% (P less than 0.0002, P less than 0.007) respectively. These results suggest that the PAF antagonist affected implantation at the embryonic and maternal levels. However, when the blastocysts were transferred to Day-4 pseudopregnant recipients, treatment of the donor female had a dramatic effect on the implantation rate, resulting in a reduction of 64% (from 40% to 14.3%, P less than 0.04), while treatment of the recipient female had no significant effect. In this later experiment the transferred embryos were exposed to the recipient uterine environment for a shorter period before implantation. These results suggest that PAF antagonists affected implantation at the embryonic level and did not adversely affect maternal physiology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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