Home
Scholarly Works
Functions of uterine natural killer cells are...
Journal article

Functions of uterine natural killer cells are mediated by interferon gamma production during murine pregnancy

Abstract

The dominant lymphocytes in healthy human and murine implantation sites are pregnancy-associated uterine natural killer (uNK) cells. These cells produce 90% of pregnancy-induced, uterine interferon (IFN)- gamma, a cytokine that regulates expression of more than 0.5% of the mouse genome. Implantation sites in uNK cell-deficient and IFN- gamma -signal-disrupted mice display anomalies in decidua and its spiral arteries. Reconstitution of uNK cell-deficient females with bone marrow containing normal NK cell progenitors, establishes uNK cells and reverses the anomalies. Grafts from IFN- gamma(-/-)mice are restored uNK cells, but the uNK cells did not reverse the phenotypes. This review focuses on the functions of uNK cell-derived IFN- gamma and the genes that it may regulate in the pregnant uterus.

Authors

Ashkar AA; Croy BA

Journal

Seminars in Immunology, Vol. 13, No. 4, pp. 235–241

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2001

DOI

10.1006/smim.2000.0319

ISSN

1044-5323

Contact the Experts team