Protein and enzyme patterns in the fluid cavities of the first trimester gestational sac: relevance to the absorptive role of secondary yolk sac

Gulbis, B.;Jauniaux, E.;Cotton, F.;Stordeur, P.
(1998) Molecular Human Reproduction : basic science of reproductive medicine — Vol. 4, n° 9, p. 857-862 (1998)

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  • Gulbis, B.
    Author
  • Jauniaux, E.
    Author
  • Cotton, F.
    Author
  • Stordeur, P.
    Author
Abstract
The potential absorptive role of the yolk sac membrane was evaluated by examining protein and enzyme patterns in embryonic fluids and by comparing the synthetic capacity of the secondary yolk sec, fetal liver and placenta for human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) and alpha-fetoprotein (alpha FP). In yolk sac fluid samples, protein electrophoresis showed two main electrophoretic bands with mobilities comparable to those of albumin and interalbumin-alpha 1-globulin, and immunoblotting revealed the presence of albumin, alpha FP, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-macroglobulin. transferrin, complement factors 3 and 4 and immunoglobulin G. In coelomic fluid, similar results were obtained, except for the absence of alpha 2-macroglobulin and the presence of ceruloplasmin and IgA, After electrophoresis and immunoblotting with specific antibodies, beta-HCG was detected in all placental homogenates and culture media but was not revealed in any of the corresponding yolk sec tissue samples. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) showed that all placental samples express beta-HCG mRNA whereas all yolk sec and liver samples express alpha FP mRNA. These findings suggest that the yolk sec membrane is an important zone of transfer between the extra-embryonic and embryonic compartments and may also help to further develop therapeutic protocols making use of fetal somatic gene therapy by injecting transduced cells into the exocoelomic cavity.
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Gulbis, B., Jauniaux, E., Cotton, F., & Stordeur, P. (1998). Protein and enzyme patterns in the fluid cavities of the first trimester gestational sac: relevance to the absorptive role of secondary yolk sac. Molecular Human Reproduction : basic science of reproductive medicine, 4(9), 857-862. https://doi.org/10.1093/molehr/4.9.857 (Original work published 1998)