Andrés A Kowalski, Logan G Graddy, Dustin S Vale-Cruz, Inho Choi, Benita S Katzenellenbogen, Frank A Simmen, Rosalia C M Simmen
In the pig, estrogens transiently produced by embryos and progestins of maternal origin target the uterine endometrium, causing alterations in gene expression and secretory activity, both of which are important for the initiation of embryo attachment. The potential direct embryotrophic roles of estrogens and progestins are, however, unknown. Here we report the cloning of porcine embryonic estrogen receptor-beta (ER-beta) mRNA by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using specific primer sets designed initially within conserved regions of human and bovine ER-beta mRNAs, and subsequently within regions of identified porcine ER-beta cDNA sequences...
March 2002: Biology of Reproduction