In domestic pigs, over two-thirds of reproductive losses occur during the first 25 days of gestation, a period during which rapid conceptus development, trophoblast adhesion and implantation are initiated. Successful conceptus implantation requires pregnancy-specific alterations in extracellular matrix (ECM) at the conceptus-maternal interface. The pig luminal epithelium (LE) immediately adjacent to the implanting conceptus secretes SPP1 (also known as osteopontin), an ECM molecule involved in cell-cell and cell-ECM communication that is believed to mediate conceptus-uterus interactions. We hypothesized that SPP1 expressed by the uterine LE bridges to integrin receptors on conceptus trophectoderm to stimulate adhesion at the conceptus-maternal interface. The objective of this study was to determine if SPP1 isolated from uterine secretions (uterine milk) supports trophectoderm cell adhesion in vitro. To accomplish this, we employed a unilaterally pregnant sheep model, where the ovary ipsilateral to the right uterine horn was removed and a double ligature placed at the base of the right uterine horn at the bifurcation. At the following estrus, sheep were mated to generate gravid and nongravid uterine horns, hysterectomized on day 120 and the uterine milk within nongravid horns collected. SPP1 was purified from uterine milk using a DEAE-Sephacel column (ion exchange chromatography) followed by dual phenyl-Sepharose columns (hydrophobic chromatography). A 45 kDa fragment, previously identified at the apical surface of the sheep LE during pregnancy, and a 25 kDa fragment were isolated. The spontaneously immortalized pig trophectoderm cell line pTr2 was allowed to attach to serial dilutions (20 μg/ml to 40 ng/ml) of the following proteins: bovine milk SPP1 (bSPP1; purified in the manner described above), ovine uterine milk SPP1 (oSPP1), recombinant rat SPP1 containing the RGD cellbinding sequence (rSPP1-RGD), recombinant rat SPP1 containing an RAD sequence in place of the RGD sequence (rSPP1-RAD), full-length human fibronectin (FN; positive control) and BSA (negative control). Dose-dependent cell adhesion was observed for bSPP1, oSPP1 and rSPP1- RGD, all of which supported higher levels of adhesion than FN at concentrations ranging from 0.15 and 1.25 μg/ml. Only at concentrations of 2.5 μg/ml and higher did FN support greater pTr2 adhesion than the various SPP1 proteins. Cell adhesion was not supported by rSPP1-RAD over BSA controls at any concentration, strongly suggesting that adhesion to the various SPP1 proteins and FN occurred through RGD-binding integrin receptors. Integrins require the presence of divalent cations to allow ligand binding. This property was used to further confirm that pTr2 cell adhesion to SPP1 was integrin-mediated. Cells were allowed to attach in the presence of varying levels of divalent cations: 1) no cations; 2) 1 mM Ca2+ + 2 mM Mg2+; 3) 2 mM Ca2+ + 1 mM Mg2+; or 4) 0.1 mM Mn2+. No attachment was observed in the absence of divalent cations, confirming that porcine trophectoderm attachment to SPP1 is integrin-mediated. This study is the first to demonstrate that a native form of uterine SPP1, secreted by the uterine glandular epithelium and present at the conceptus-maternal interface, can promote dose- and cation-dependent integrin-mediated adhesion of pig trophectoderm cells. (Supported by NRI USDA Grant 2006-35203-17199). (platform)
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