"Infertility affects one in six couples across the world. Miscarriage
is the most common complication of pregnancy," said Jan Brosens, M.D., a
researcher involved in the work from the Division of Translational and
Systems Medicine and Reproductive Health at Warwick Medical School at
the University of Warwick in Coventry, UK. "Approximately one in seven
clinical pregnancies result in miscarriage, mostly prior to 12 weeks of
pregnancy. It is estimated that five percent of women experience two
clinical miscarriages and approximately one percent have three or more
losses. From a medical perspective, recurrent miscarriages and
implantation failure have remained frustratingly devoid of effective
therapeutic strategies."
To make this discovery, Brosens and colleagues, obtained womb biopsies from 70 women who have experienced recurrent pregnancy loss. The cells from these biopsies were purified and then treated in such a way as to simulate a pregnancy. They found that failure of embryonic and maternal body clock genes to synchronize could have catastrophic consequences. Not only did they find that this could cause miscarriage or infertility, but they also found more subtle synchronization defects could increase the risk of complications in the later stages of pregnancy, such as pre-eclampsia, fetal growth restriction and pre-term birth. This work also provides new insights into the known link between shift or night work and reproductive disorders.
"This research offers some insight into why some women cannot bring pregnancies to full term," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal, "and it shows that the womb has a body clock of its own, and that this clock needs to synchronize with the mother's."
To make this discovery, Brosens and colleagues, obtained womb biopsies from 70 women who have experienced recurrent pregnancy loss. The cells from these biopsies were purified and then treated in such a way as to simulate a pregnancy. They found that failure of embryonic and maternal body clock genes to synchronize could have catastrophic consequences. Not only did they find that this could cause miscarriage or infertility, but they also found more subtle synchronization defects could increase the risk of complications in the later stages of pregnancy, such as pre-eclampsia, fetal growth restriction and pre-term birth. This work also provides new insights into the known link between shift or night work and reproductive disorders.
"This research offers some insight into why some women cannot bring pregnancies to full term," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal, "and it shows that the womb has a body clock of its own, and that this clock needs to synchronize with the mother's."
SOURCE:
Sciencedaily and provided by Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.



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