4.5 Article

Interactions between inflammatory signals and the progesterone receptor in regulating gene expression in pregnant human uterine myocytes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 2487-2503

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2012.01567.x

Keywords

labour; parturition; progesterone; PR; inflammation; NF-kappaB

Funding

  1. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre
  2. NIHR

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The absence of a fall in circulating progesterone levels has led to the concept that human labour is associated with functional progesterone withdrawal caused through changes in the expression or function of progesterone receptor (PR). At the time of labour, the human uterus is heavily infiltrated with inflammatory cells, which release cytokines to create a myometrial inflammation via NF-?B activation. The negative interaction between NF-?B and PR, may represent a mechanism to account for functional progesterone withdrawal at term. Conversely, PR may act to inhibit NF-?B function and so play a role in inhibition of myometrial inflammation during pregnancy. To model this inter-relationship, we have used small interfering (si) RNA-mediated knock-down of PR in human pregnant myocytes and whole genome microarray analysis to identify genes regulated through PR. We then activated myometrial inflammation using IL-1 beta stimulation to determine the role of PR in myometrial inflammation regulation. Through PR-knock-down, we found that PR regulates gene networks involved in myometrial quiescence and extracellular matrix integrity. Activation of myometrial inflammation was found to antagonize PR-induced gene expression, of genes normally upregulated via PR. We found that PR does not play a role in repression of pro-inflammatory gene networks induced by IL-1 beta and that only MMP10 was significantly regulated in opposite directions by IL-1 beta and PR. We conclude that progesterone acting through PR does not generally inhibit myometrial inflammation. Activation of myometrial inflammation does cause functional progesterone withdrawal but only in the context of genes normally upregulated via PR.

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