maternal interaction
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Su ◽  
Qianru Li ◽  
Qiaochu Zhang ◽  
Zhiming Li ◽  
Xinxin Yao ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Inadequate feto-maternal interaction will directly lead to the failures of pregnancy and bring serious damage to dairy cows. Exosomes are widely involved in endometrial matrix remodeling, immune function changes, placental development, and other processes of embryo implantation and pregnancy of dairy cows. However, the role of placental trophoblast cells derived exosomes is still unclear in regulating the receptivity of endometrial cells and facilitating the interaction between mother and fetus. Methods In this study, bovine trophoblast cells (BTCs) were obtained from bovine placenta and immortalized through the transfection of telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene. After that, the effect of trophoblast derived exosomes (TDEs) on endometrial receptivity in endometrial epithelial cells (EECs) was detected and the mechanism explored that TDEs and their proteins participated in feto-maternal interaction during bovine pregnancy. EECs were co-cultured with the exosomes derived from progesterone (P4) and treated with BTCs. Results Immortalized BTCs still possessed the basic and key properties of primary BTCs without showing a neoplastic transformation sign. Exosomes derived from P4 and treated with BTCs enhanced the expression of endometrial receptivity factors in EECs by changing the extracellular environment, metabolism and redox balance in EECs with proteome alignment, compared with those untreated according to the DIA quantitation analysis. Conclusions Our study found that trophoblast derived exosomal proteins are one of the most critical elements in feto-maternal interaction and their changes act as a key signal in altering endometrial receptivity and provided a potential target for improving fertility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (10) ◽  
pp. 5402
Author(s):  
Natalia Gebara ◽  
Yolanda Correia ◽  
Keqing Wang ◽  
Benedetta Bussolati

Angiogenesis is one of the main processes that coordinate the biological events leading to a successful pregnancy, and its imbalance characterizes several pregnancy-related diseases, including preeclampsia. Intracellular interactions via extracellular vesicles (EVs) contribute to pregnancy’s physiology and pathophysiology, and to the fetal–maternal interaction. The present review outlines the implications of EV-mediated crosstalk in the angiogenic process in healthy pregnancy and its dysregulation in preeclampsia. In particular, the effect of EVs derived from gestational tissues in pro and anti-angiogenic processes in the physiological and pathological setting is described. Moreover, the application of EVs from placental stem cells in the clinical setting is reported.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roman Dvorkin ◽  
Stephen D. Shea

ABSTRACTThe noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC) mediates key aspects of arousal, memory, and cognition in structured tasks, but its contribution to natural behavior remains unclear. Neuronal activity in LC is organized into sustained (‘tonic’) firing patterns reflecting global brain states and rapidly fluctuating (‘phasic’) bursts signaling discrete behaviorally significant events. LC’s broad participation in social behavior including maternal behavior is well-established, yet the temporal relationship of its activity to sensory events and behavioral decisions in this context is unknown. Here, we made electrical and optical recordings from LC in female mice during maternal interaction with pups. We find that pup retrieval stably elicits precisely timed and pervasive phasic activation of LC that can’t be attributed to sensory stimuli, motor activity, or reward. Correlation of LC activity with retrieval events shows that phasic events are most closely related to subsequent behavior. We conclude that LC likely drives goal-directed action selection during social behavior with globally-broadcast noradrenaline release.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolin Konrad ◽  
Mona Hillmann ◽  
Janine Rispler ◽  
Luisa Niehaus ◽  
Lina Neuhoff ◽  
...  

Studies have demonstrated that parents often exhibit a still face while silently reading their cell phones when responding to texts. Such disruptions to parent-child interactions have been observed during parental media use such as texting and these disruptions have been termed technoference. In the present study, we explored changes to mother-child interactions that occur before, during and after interruptions due to texting using an adapted naturalistic still face paradigm. Specifically, we examined the effect of an interruption due to either maternal smartphone use or use of an analog medium on maternal interaction quality with their 20- to 22-month-old children. Mother-child interactions during free play were interrupted for 2 min by asking the mothers to fill out a questionnaire either (a) by typing on the smartphone (smartphone group) or (b) on paper with a pen (paper-pencil group). Interactional quality was compared between free-play and interruption phases and to a no-interruption control group. Mixed ANOVA across phase and condition indicated that maternal responsiveness and pedagogical behavior decreased during the interruption phase for both the interruption groups (smartphone and paper-and-pencil) but not for the no-interruption group. Children also increased their positive bids for attention during the paper-and-pencil and the smartphone conditions relative to the no-interruption control. These findings are consistent with a large body of research on the still-face paradigm and with a recent study demonstrating that smartphone interruptions decreased parenting quality. The present study, however, connects these lines of research showing the many everyday disruptions to parent-child interactions are likely to decrease parenting quality and that toddlers are likely to detect and attempt to repair such interruptions.


Author(s):  
Yulia N. Cajas ◽  
Karina Cañón-Beltrán ◽  
María Gemma Millán de la Blanca ◽  
José M. Sánchez ◽  
Beatriz Fernandez-Fuertes ◽  
...  

Biomolecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1690
Author(s):  
Leopoldo González-Brusi ◽  
Blanca Algarra ◽  
Carla Moros-Nicolás ◽  
Mª José Izquierdo-Rico ◽  
Manuel Avilés ◽  
...  

The oviduct plays important roles in reproductive events: sperm reservoir formation, final gamete maturation, fertilization and early embryo development. It is well known that the oviductal environment affects gametes and embryos and, ultimately, the health of offspring, so that in vivo embryos are better in terms of morphology, cryotolerance, pregnancy rates or epigenetic profile than those obtained in vitro. The deciphering of embryo–maternal interaction in the oviduct may provide a better understanding of the embryo needs during the periconception period to improve reproductive efficiency. Here, we perform a comparative analysis among species of oviductal gene expression related to embryonic development during its journey through the oviduct, as described to date. Cross-talk communication between the oviduct environment and embryo will be studied by analyses of the secreted or exosomal proteins of the oviduct and the presence of receptors in the membrane of the embryo blastomeres. Finally, we review the data that are available to date on the expression and characterization of the most abundant protein in the oviduct, oviductin (OVGP1), highlighting its fundamental role in fertilization and embryonic development.


2020 ◽  
Vol 150 ◽  
pp. 139-149
Author(s):  
Beatriz Rodríguez-Alonso ◽  
José María Sánchez ◽  
Encina González ◽  
Patrick Lonergan ◽  
Dimitrios Rizos

2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 742-752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J Stadtmauer ◽  
Günter P Wagner

Synopsis Embryo implantation is a hallmark of the female reproductive biology of eutherian (placental) mammals and does not exist in a sustainable form in any other vertebrate group. Implantation is the initial process that leads to a sustained fetal-maternal unit engendering a complex functional relationship between the mother and the embryo/fetus. The nature of this relationship is often portrayed as one of conflict between an aggressive embryo and a passive or defensive maternal organism. Recent progress in elucidating the evolutionary origin of eutherian pregnancy leads to a different picture. The emerging scenario suggests that the very initial stages in the evolution of embryo implantation required evolutionary changes to the maternal physiology which modified an ancestral generic mucosal inflammation in response to the presence of the embryo into an active embedding process. This “female-first” evolutionary scenario also explains the role of endometrial receptivity in human pregnancy. On the marsupial side, where in most animals the fetal–maternal interaction is short and does not lead to a long term sustainable placentation, the relationship is mutual. In these mammals, uterine inflammation is followed by parturition in short order. The inflammatory signaling pathways, however, are cooperative, i.e., they are performed by both the fetus and the mother and therefore we call this relationship “cooperative inflammation.” Based on these discoveries we reconceive the narrative of the maternal–fetal relationship.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 180-186
Author(s):  
Mackenzie D. M. Whipps ◽  
Elizabeth B. Miller ◽  
Debra L. Bogen ◽  
Alan L. Mendelsohn ◽  
Pamela A. Morris ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 401-417
Author(s):  
Chien-Ju CHANG ◽  
Ya-Hui LUO

AbstractThis longitudinal study examines change in maternal interaction strategies in Taiwanese mothers across time, and the synchronic and diachronic relationships between maternal interaction strategies and children's language and early literacy skills. Forty-two mother–child dyads participated in this study. Their interactions during joint book-reading were tape-recorded, transcribed, and analyzed when the children were fourteen, twenty-six, and thirty-six months of age. The children received a battery of language and early literacy tests when they were thirty-six months old. Findings showed that Taiwanese mothers adjusted their use of interaction strategies as their children grew. Maternal use of description, performance, prediction inference, and print-related talk were positively correlated with their children's language and literacy skills. Significant negative correlations were found between use of task-behavioral regulation strategy and text reading in mothers and their children's language performance. This study suggests that age-appropriate interaction strategies are important for children's language and early literacy development.


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