Myometrial interstitial cells and the coordination of myometrial contractility
review
OA: bronze
CC0
⤵ 3 in-corpus citations
AI-generated summary
This review examines myometrial Cajal-like interstitial cells (m-ICLC) and their potential role in coordinating uterine contractility, despite imatinib mesylate's lack of effect on spontaneous contractions.
One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works
Abstract
Abstract Introduction Nomenclature Uterine contractions and the ‘functional syncytium theory’ Interstitial cells of Cajal in the gastrointestinal and urinary tracts Are there m‐ICLC in myometrium? The effect of c‐kit inhibition on myometrial contractility Electrophysiology of m‐ICLC Imaging of tissue level signals in myometrium Emerging concepts – the possible role of extracellular ATP in myometrial contractility Where do m‐ICLC fit in with a model for the generation of myometrial contractions? Future research directions Conclusion A strict regulation of contractility in the uterus and fallopian tube is essential for various reproductive functions. The uterus contributes, through either increased contractility or periods of relative quiescence, to: ( i ) expulsion of menstrual debris, ( ii ) sperm transport, ( iii ) adequate embryo placement during implantation, ( iv ) enlarging its capacity during pregnancy and ( v ) parturition. The dominant cell population of the uterine wall consists of smooth muscle cells that contain the contractile apparatus responsible for the generation of contractile force. Recent interest has focused on a new population of cells located throughout the myometrium on the borders of smooth muscle bundles. These cells are similar to interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) in the gut that are responsible for the generation of electrical slow waves that control peristalsis. A precise role for myometrial Cajal‐like interstitial cells (m‐ICLC) has not been identified. m‐ICLC express the c‐kit receptor, involved in creating and maintaining the ICC phenotype in the gastrointestinal tract. However, both acute and prolonged inhibition of this receptor with the c‐kit antagonist imatinib mesylate does not appear to affect the spontaneous contractility of myometrium. Calcium imaging of live tissue slices suggests that contractile signalling starts on the borders of smooth muscle bundles where m‐ICLC are located and recently the possible role of extracellular ATP signalling from m‐ICLC has been studied. This manuscript reviews the evidence regarding tissue‐level signalling in the myometrium with a particular emphasis on the anatomical and possible functional aspects of m‐ICLC as new elements of the contractile mechanisms in the uterus.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Citation neighborhood (sparse)
Too few in-corpus citations on either side for a chart; here are the lists.
Cited by (3)
- Telocytes enhanced the proliferation, adhesion and motility of endometrial stromal cells as mediated by the ERK pathway in vitro. 2019
- Interstitial Cajal-like cells of human Fallopian tube express estrogen and progesterone receptors 2009
- Pathophysiological Implications of Interstitial Cajal-like Cells (ICC-like) in Uterus: A Comparative Study with Gastrointestinal ICCs 2023
References (86)
- W293230073 via openalex
- W1488640279 via openalex
- W1496078382 via openalex
- W1560985881 via openalex
- W1572944703 via openalex
- W1606958661 via openalex
- W1862343792 via openalex
- W1901063570 via openalex
- W1967837081 via openalex
- W1968941254 via openalex
- W1969112054 via openalex
- W1970903104 via openalex
- W1972943373 via openalex
- W1974810315 via openalex
- W1975675431 via openalex
- W1977616660 via openalex
- W1978254950 via openalex
- W1984989888 via openalex
- W1988530903 via openalex
- W1991327428 via openalex
- W1993746496 via openalex
- W1994746461 via openalex
- W2000169332 via openalex
- W2002018357 via openalex
- W2004688423 via openalex
- W2005085712 via openalex
- W2010783115 via openalex
- W2014064304 via openalex
- W2015576165 via openalex
- W2016568267 via openalex
- W2016853107 via openalex
- W2017385989 via openalex
- W2023766626 via openalex
- W2023916852 via openalex
- W2027666380 via openalex
- W2027763369 via openalex
- W2031997530 via openalex
- W2034916311 via openalex
- W2041488113 via openalex
- W2043024182 via openalex
- W2043887449 via openalex
- W2044363971 via openalex
- W2047460472 via openalex
- W2047790075 via openalex
- W2051846099 via openalex
- W2052147623 via openalex
- W2057981516 via openalex
- W2060138155 via openalex
- W2060644543 via openalex
- W2061305669 via openalex
- W2061871637 via openalex
- W2064079117 via openalex
- W2065237397 via openalex
- W2065336166 via openalex
- W2067620759 via openalex
- W2068001447 via openalex
- W2073236502 via openalex
- W2076802088 via openalex
- W2078984050 via openalex
- W2086120221 via openalex
- W2089846306 via openalex
- W2090004346 via openalex
- W2091504028 via openalex
- W2095866466 via openalex
- W2103003685 via openalex
- W2109485292 via openalex
- W2117358584 via openalex
- W2118287595 via openalex
- W2121676189 via openalex
- W2124241294 via openalex
- W2125157484 via openalex
- W2129064769 via openalex
- W2130362253 via openalex
- W2135554976 via openalex
- W2141987794 via openalex
- W2145760006 via openalex
- W2153207688 via openalex
- W2155506935 via openalex
- W2161521033 via openalex
- W2165227955 via openalex
- W2315488887 via openalex
- W2628053793 via openalex
- W4240122463 via openalex
- W4244348549 via openalex
- W4256214760 via openalex
- W4285719527 via openalex
Cited by (3)
- Pathophysiological Implications of Interstitial Cajal-like Cells (ICC-like) in Uterus: A Comparative Study with Gastrointestinal ICCs 2023
- Telocytes enhanced the proliferation, adhesion and motility of endometrial stromal cells as mediated by the ERK pathway in vitro. 2019
- Interstitial Cajal-like cells of human Fallopian tube express estrogen and progesterone receptors 2009
Source provenance
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
License: CC0
· commercial use OK