Abstract

This study evaluated the expression of the corticosteroid-metabolizing enzyme 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta HSD) during in vitro decidualization of human endometrial stromal cells. The cultured stromal cells displayed both NADP(+)-dependent (type 1) and NAD(+)-dependent (type 2) 11 beta HSD activities under basal conditions. Although the cells did not respond to estradiol (E2) added alone, catalytic levels of both isoforms were enhanced by medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) and further enhanced by E2 plus MPA. Type I messenger RNA (mRNA) was undetected by Northern analysis of total RNA, but was evident as a 1.5-kilobase band in polyadenylated selected RNA from E2- plus MPA-treated cultures. Use of RT-PCR to augment the sensitivity of mRNA detection revealed the presence of type I mRNA as a faint band in the MPA-treated cultures and as an intense band in the E2- plus MPA-treated cultures. Thus, type I mRNA is present as a low abundance message in the cultured stromal cells whose steady state levels parallel progestin-enhanced enzyme activity. As the expression of several progestin-regulated decidualization markers is also augmented by E2, the results of the present study reveal a correlation between enhanced 11 beta HSD expression and the decidualization reaction. Time-course measurements indicated that elevated 11 beta HSD expression is an early event in the decidualization response, which precedes E2- plus MPA-enhanced PRL production by several days. Clear dose-response effects on both type 1 and type 2 11 beta HSD activities were obtained in cells incubated with 10(-8) mol/liter E2 added together with MPA at concentrations that approximated circulating progesterone levels from the luteal phase (10(-9) mol/liter) through pregnancy (10(-7) mol/liter). Corticosteroids are thought to exert toxic and teratogenic effects on the implanting embryo and could influence trophoblast invasion by regulating extracellular matrix turnover. Therefore, the novel finding that decidualization involves marked enhancement of the corticosteroid-metabolizing capacity of stromal cells suggests a mechanism by which decidual cells could affect the health and invasiveness of implanting trophoblastic cells.

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