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pmid: 7207025
Abstract Pregnant donor (day 3) and non-pregnant recipient rats were hypophysectomized and injected daily for 6 days with 2 mg of progesterone. A single dose of 20 ng of estradiol-17β in saline was administered via a tail vein to either the donor, the recipient, or to both animals; blastocysts were transferred 60 to 90 minutes after the latter injection. Twenty-four hours later uterine implantation sites were delineated by injection of Chicago Blue-B dye. The results indicate that both the blastocyst and the uterus must be exposed to estrogen to obtain normal implantation rates. While 43.2% of the embryos implanted when both the donor and the recipient received estrogen, only 6.3% implanted when only the recipient was injected with estrogen. No implantations were found in animals in which only the embryos had been exposed to estrogen, suggesting that if this steroid was synthesized by the embryo it was insufficient to induce implantation in the rat.
Blastocyst, Pregnancy, Uterus, Animals, Estrogens, Female, Embryo Implantation, Progesterone, Rats
Blastocyst, Pregnancy, Uterus, Animals, Estrogens, Female, Embryo Implantation, Progesterone, Rats
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