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Endometrial Microbiota and Immune Tolerance in Pregnancy

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24032995

Keywords

endometrium; microbiome; pregnancy; implantation

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Recent studies have shown that the uterus has its own microbiota, but the composition of endometrial microbiota and its role in a healthy uterine environment are still not well understood. The interaction between endometrial microbiota and the immune system during conception and pregnancy may play a crucial role in reproductive outcomes. This review aims to summarize the molecular mechanisms by which endometrial microbiota interacts with the immune system, and discuss the link between dysbiosis and reproductive disorders.
Recent studies have demonstrated that the uterus has its own microbiota. However, there is no consensus on endometrial microbiota composition, thus its role in the healthy uterine environment is still a frontier topic. Endometrial receptivity is key to embryo implantation, and in this specific context immunological tolerance against fetal antigens and the tightly regulated expression of inflammatory mediators are fundamental. According to recent evidence, endometrial microbiota may interact in a very dynamic way with the immune system during the peri-conceptional stage and later during pregnancy. For this reason, a condition of dysbiosis might lead to adverse pregnancy outcomes. The aim of this review is to summarize the evidence on the molecular mechanisms by which the endometrial microbiota may interact with the immune system. For this purpose, the link between dysbiosis and reproductive disorders, such as infertility, recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL), and preterm birth, will be discussed. In conclusion, the most recent findings from molecular analyses will be reported to illustrate and possibly overcome the intrinsic limitations of uterine microbiota detection (low endometrial biomass, high risk of contamination during sampling, and lack of standardization).

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