Quantitative analysis of T lymphocyte subsets in pregnant and nonpregnant human endometrium

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to characterize and quantify T lymphocyte populations and to investigate T cell antigen receptor (TcR) expression in human endometrium throughout the menstrual cycle and in early pregnancy. Frozen sections of endometrium were labeled using the highly sensitive avidin-biotin method and a panel of monoclonal antibodies. CD3-positive, CD8- positive, CD4-positive, TcRαβ-positive, and TcRγδ-positive cells were demonstrated in all phases of the menstrual cycle and in early pregnancy. There were no differences between pregnant and nonpregnant human endometrium in the proportion that each T cell subpopulation formed relative to the total CD3-positive T cell population. However, significantly fewer T cells were detected in early pregnant compared with nonpregnant endometrium. Our results clarify the TcR expression by T cells in pregnant and nonpregnant human endometrium and indicate that endometrial T cells are unlikely to play a significant role in implantation and the maintenance of human pregnancy since they decrease in number considerably in the first trimester of gestation.

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Vassiliadou, N., & Bulmer, J. N. (1996). Quantitative analysis of T lymphocyte subsets in pregnant and nonpregnant human endometrium. Biology of Reproduction, 55(5), 1017–1022. https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod55.5.1017

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