Influence of oestrogen and progesterone on macrophage distribution in the mouse uterus.
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Macrophages are constituents of all normal connective tissue including the murine uterus. Macrophages have been identified previously in endometrium and myometrium of pregnant and non-pregnant murine uterus using antibodies against macrophages. In the current study immunohistochemical analysis of murine uterus demonstrated that there were not significant quantitative differences in uterine macrophages between the diestrous, pro-oestrous and oestrous stages. However, distributional changes occurred during the oestrous cycle. Macrophages were evenly distributed throughout uterine tissue during dioestrus, while, during pro-oestrus and oestrus, their concentration was highest in the subepithelial stroma. Because the oestrous cycle is hormonally regulated, we asked whether or not oestrogen and/or progesterone might influence macrophage distribution. Ovariectomy, which eliminates cyclical production of oestrogen and progesterone, resulted in a significant decrease in both the relative and the absolute number of uterine macrophages within 6 days. Injections of progesterone or oestrogen to ovariectomized mice resulted in restoration of uterine macrophage numbers. Injection of oestrogen plus progesterone in a regimen known to prepare the uterus for receptivity for blastocyst implantation increased the number of macrophages to levels which were consistently higher than those seen during oestrus. Moreover, following hormone administration macrophages were more concentrated in the subepithelial stroma, a distributional pattern which was most evident following injection of both hormones. The results suggest that both oestrogen and progesterone promote quantitative and distributional changes in the uterine macrophage population.