Abstract

The window of implantation (WOI) is a brief period during which the endometrium is receptive to embryo implantation. This study investigated the relationship between miR-135a-5p and endometrial receptivity. Peripheral blood was collected on the day of ovulation and the 5th day after ovulation for high-throughput sequencing from women who achieved clinical pregnancy through natural cycle frozen embryo transfer. RT-qPCR assessed miR-135a-5p expression in the endometrium tissue or cells during the mouse implantation window or decidualization. Scanning electron microscopy was utilized to observe pinopode morphology and quantity in mice overexpressing miR-135a-5p during the WOI. Human endometrial stromal cells (HESC) and artificial induction of mouse uterine decidualization were used to explore whether miR-135a-5p overexpression inhibits decidualization by regulating HOXA10 and BMPR2. Furthermore, the impact of miR-135a-5p on HESC proliferation and HTR8/SVneo invasion was explored. A total of 54 women were enrolled in the study. bioinformatics analysis and animal models demonstrated that miR-135a-5p was significantly downregulated during the WOI, and its high expression can lead to abnormal pregnancy outcomes. Overexpression of miR-135a-5p resulted in the absence of pinopode in mouse endometrial tissue during the WOI. High miR-135a-5p levels were found to potentially inhibit endometrial tissue decidualization by downregulating HOXA10 and BMPR2 expression. Finally, CEBPD was identified as a potential regulator of miR-135a-5p, which would explain the decreased miR-135a-5p expression during the WOI. MiR-135a-5p expression is significantly downregulated during the WOI. High miR-135a-5p levels suppress pinopode development and endometrial tissue decidualization through HOXA10 and BMPR2, contributing to inadequate endometrial receptivity.

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