Loss of cyclooxygenase-2 retards decidual growth but does not inhibit embryo implantation or development to term

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Abstract

Previous reports have described that female mice deficient in cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2) are largely infertile because of failure to ovulate, poor fertilization, and defective implantation and decidualization. In the present study, we reinvestigated reproduction in these mice and found they do show a reduction in the numbers of ovulated and fertilized eggs. However, we did not observe any substantial effect on embryo implantation frequencies or an inability of COX2-deficient females to support embryo development to weaning. Pseudopregnant COX2-null recipients do not show any alteration in the timing of implantation following blastocyst transfer, but they do show a delay in the initial rate of decidual growth after implantation that lags by approximately 24 h compared to that in heterozygous or wild-type recipients. These results support previous findings that COX2 has a role in mediating the initial uterine decidual response but is not essential to sustaining decidual growth and embryo development throughout the remainder of pregnancy.

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Cheng, J. G., & Stewart, C. L. (2003). Loss of cyclooxygenase-2 retards decidual growth but does not inhibit embryo implantation or development to term. Biology of Reproduction, 68(2), 401–404. https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.102.009589

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