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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yamauchi, Nobuhiko
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: The Journal of reproduction and development 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41500564/
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author Yamauchi, Nobuhiko
author_facet Yamauchi, Nobuhiko
Yamauchi, Nobuhiko
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Development of a three-dimensional culture model of endometrium to study embryo-uterine interactions. Yamauchi, Nobuhiko Female Endometrium Animals Cell Culture Techniques, Three Dimensional Humans Embryo Implantation Cattle Uterus Coculture Techniques Spheroids, Cellular Microphysiological Systems Three-dimensional (3D) culture systems provide physiologically relevant models that better replicate in vivo cell architecture and function compared to the conventional two-dimensional cultures. In reproductive biology, 3D models of endometrial cells have emerged as powerful tools to investigate uterine physiology, embryo-maternal interactions, and implantation processes. Gel-based cultures using natural extracellular matrices such as collagen or Matrigel enable endometrial epithelial and stromal cells to form gland-like or fibroblast-like structures while maintaining hormone responsiveness and secretory activity. In addition, spheroid cultures recapitulate cell polarity, paracrine signaling, and tissue remodeling, offering insights into implantation biology and endometrial pathologies such as endometriosis. Our studies have demonstrated that bovine endometrial epithelial cells embedded in Matrigel exhibit enhanced glandular gene expression and that engineered hetero-spheroids provide stable models for studying interferon-induced matrix remodeling. Furthermore, co-culture of cultured endometrial explants with rat hatched blastocyst facilitates in vitro analysis of embryo attachment and uterine receptivity. Advances in organoid and microfluidic platforms extend these models by enabling long-term culture and dynamic hormonal regulation. Collectively, 3D culture approaches bridge the gap between in vitro experimentation and in vivo physiology, offering translational applications in reproductive medicine, livestock fertility management, and drug discovery.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41500564
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher The Journal of reproduction and development
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Development of a three-dimensional culture model of endometrium to study embryo-uterine interactions.
Yamauchi, Nobuhiko
Female
Endometrium
Animals
Cell Culture Techniques, Three Dimensional
Humans
Embryo Implantation
Cattle
Uterus
Coculture Techniques
Spheroids, Cellular
Microphysiological Systems
Development of a three-dimensional culture model of endometrium to study embryo-uterine interactions. Yamauchi, Nobuhiko Female Endometrium Animals Cell Culture Techniques, Three Dimensional Humans Embryo Implantation Cattle Uterus Coculture Techniques Spheroids, Cellular Microphysiological Systems Three-dimensional (3D) culture systems provide physiologically relevant models that better replicate in vivo cell architecture and function compared to the conventional two-dimensional cultures. In reproductive biology, 3D models of endometrial cells have emerged as powerful tools to investigate uterine physiology, embryo-maternal interactions, and implantation processes. Gel-based cultures using natural extracellular matrices such as collagen or Matrigel enable endometrial epithelial and stromal cells to form gland-like or fibroblast-like structures while maintaining hormone responsiveness and secretory activity. In addition, spheroid cultures recapitulate cell polarity, paracrine signaling, and tissue remodeling, offering insights into implantation biology and endometrial pathologies such as endometriosis. Our studies have demonstrated that bovine endometrial epithelial cells embedded in Matrigel exhibit enhanced glandular gene expression and that engineered hetero-spheroids provide stable models for studying interferon-induced matrix remodeling. Furthermore, co-culture of cultured endometrial explants with rat hatched blastocyst facilitates in vitro analysis of embryo attachment and uterine receptivity. Advances in organoid and microfluidic platforms extend these models by enabling long-term culture and dynamic hormonal regulation. Collectively, 3D culture approaches bridge the gap between in vitro experimentation and in vivo physiology, offering translational applications in reproductive medicine, livestock fertility management, and drug discovery.
title Development of a three-dimensional culture model of endometrium to study embryo-uterine interactions.
topic Female
Endometrium
Animals
Cell Culture Techniques, Three Dimensional
Humans
Embryo Implantation
Cattle
Uterus
Coculture Techniques
Spheroids, Cellular
Microphysiological Systems
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41500564/