Immunohistochemical analysis of bone morphological protein signaling pathway in human myometrium.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_DE4BC407FD84
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Immunohistochemical analysis of bone morphological protein signaling pathway in human myometrium.
Journal
Experimental and Molecular Pathology
Author(s)
Rouleau C., Rico C., Hapkova I., de Santa Barbara P.
ISSN
1096-0945 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0014-4800
Publication state
Published
Issued date
04/2012
Volume
93
Number
1
Pages
56-60
Language
english
Abstract
We assessed by immunohistochemistry the expression of the phosphorylated (activated) form of Smad1 and 5 (P-SMAD1/5), of Noggin and of two smooth muscle cell markers (α-SMA and SM22) in a series of human myometrium samples and in a smooth muscle cell line derived from human myometrium (HUt-SMC, PromoCell, USA). Myometrium samples were removed from two cadavers (a fetus at 26weeks of gestation and a neonate) and from ten non-menopausal women who underwent hysterectomy for adenomyosis and leiomyoma. P-SMAD1/5 expression was never detected in myometrium (both normal and pathological specimens), but only as a nuclear positive staining in glandular and luminal epithelial cells in sections in which also the endometrial mucosa was present. Noggin was strongly expressed especially in myometrium and adenomyosis samples from non-menopausal patients in comparison to the neonatal and fetal myometrium specimens in which muscle cells were less positive. In more than 95% of HUt-SMCs, α-SMA and Desmin were co-expressed, indicating a pure smooth muscle phenotype. When progesterone was added to the culture medium, no P-SMAD1/5 expression was detected, whereas the expression Noggin and SM22, a marker of differentiated smooth muscle cells, increased by 3 fold (p=0.002) and 4.3 fold (p=0.001), respectively (p=0.002). Our results suggest that, in non-menopausal normal human myometrium, the BMP pathway might be inhibited and that this inhibition might be enhanced by progesterone, which increases the differentiation of smooth muscle cells (SM22 levels). These findings could help in the identification of new mechanisms that regulate uterine motility.
Keywords
BMP, Human myometrium, Uterine smooth muscle cells, Noggin, P-SMAD1/5
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
14/06/2012 11:06
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:02
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