That a mammalian embryo might influence the maternal
endocrinological and/or immunological systems
whilst still in the Fallopian tube has long seemed possible
(Fig. 1). Under normal circumstances, the embryo
contains a full diploid complement of genetic information
and thus the point at issue is just how soon instructions
in the genome are expressed for trophic purposes.
It could be argued from several points of view
that it would be biologically prudent for an embryo to
influence the mother whilst still at an early stage of
development. Consideration of the extremely intimate
apposition of the zona pellucida and the tubal epithelium
- perhaps best appreciated in scanning electron
micrographs (Fig. 2) - also suggests scope for a mutual
exchange of signals. Even so, one of the earliest
recorded maternal responses to a developing embryo
is the change in permeability of the capillary bed of the
uterus that precedes implantation in rodents: this can
be demonstrated by the Pontamine blue reaction, a
series of bands of dye in the uterine wall corresponding
to the location of individual embryos, and is
detectable in rats on the fourth day after mating
(Psychoyos, 1960, 1973).