3DMOUSEneST: a volumetric, label-free imaging method evaluating embryo-uterine interaction and decidualization efficacy.
Audrey SavolainenEmmi KapiainenVeli-Pekka RonkainenValerio IzziMartin M MatzukDiana MonsivaisRenata Prunskaite-HyyryläinenPublished in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2024)
Effective interplay between the uterus and the embryo is essential for pregnancy establishment, however, convenient methods to screen embryo implantation success and maternal uterine response in experimental mouse models are currently lacking. Here we report 3DMOUSEneST, a groundbreaking method for analyzing mouse implantation sites based on label-free higher harmonic generation microscopy, providing unprecedented insights into the embryo-uterine dynamics during early pregnancy. The 3DMOUSEneST method incorporates second-harmonic generation microscopy to image the three-dimensional structure formed by decidual fibrillar collagen, named 'decidual nest', and third-harmonic generation microscopy to evaluate early conceptus (defined as the embryo and extraembryonic tissues) growth. We demonstrate that decidual nest volume is a measurable indicator of decidualization efficacy and correlates with the probability of early pregnancy progression based on a logistic regression analysis using Smad1/5 and Smad2/3 conditional knockout mice with known implantation defects. 3DMOUSEneST has great potential to become a principal method for studying decidual fibrillar collagen and characterizing mouse models associated with early embryonic lethality and fertility issues.