Abstract

A monospecific antibody was used to determine the immunocytochemical localization of insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP-1) in the rat uterus. Immunoreactive IGFBP-1 was first detected from day 5 of pregnancy in the luminal and glandular epithelium. However, immunoreactivity was most intense from day 6 in the glandular epithelium, where it was associated with apically located granules. Immunoreactive glands were located only in non-decidualized endometrium, which was limited at the implant site to a thin basal layer by growth of the antimesometrial decidua from day 7. However, glands and associated immunoreactive IGFBP-1 were prominent in the inter-implant sites until day 9, although they were detected throughout pregnancy. Similar reactivity was detected in the glands of the basal endometrium in deciduomata-bearing animals, but these decreased in number from day 7 of pseudopregnancy. No immunoreactivity was detected during the oestrous cycle but could be induced in ovariectomized animals by sequential oestradiol and oestradiol plus progesterone treatment. The observations were consistent with IGFBP-1 representing a secretory product of the glandular epithelium and could either play a role in development of the trophoblastic component of the conceptus during the pre-placental period of anti-mesometrial implantation or in the endometrium acting as an inhibitor of local IGF-I action and in either case by transporting IGF-I from the stromal to the glandular luminal environment.

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