Implantation and establishment of pregnancy in the pig

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Abstract

Establishment of pregnancy in the pig is initiated through the release of estrogens from the rapidly elongating conceptuses. Release of estrogens from the developing conceptuses alters the movement of endometrial prostaglandin F2α from being released into the vasculature (endocrine secretion) to sequestering in the uterine lumen (exocrine secretion). Rapid trophoblast elongation, which is unique to the pig, may be triggered through production of interleukin 1β2 (IL1B2) by conceptuses. Trophoblast elongation through the uterine horns provides the mechanism to allow conceptus–endometrial interactions essential for the implantation, placentation, and maintenance of pregnancy in the pig. This chapter provides current information on conceptus signaling pathways and endometrial responses to those conceptus factors leading to establishment of pregnancy.

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Geisert, R. D., Johnson, G. A., & Burghardt, R. C. (2015). Implantation and establishment of pregnancy in the pig. In Advances in Anatomy Embryology and Cell Biology (Vol. 216, pp. 137–163). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15856-3_8

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