dogenic gene expression profiles in TE cells isolated from good and bad quality blastocysts to fully correlate specific transcriptional events with efficient TE development. Among the models used to study trophoblast development, hESCs have emerged as a useful tool to examine the emergence and differentiation of TE cells. Particularly, the transcriptomic analysis of TE cells derived from hESCs has provided new insights into the signaling pathways and the molecular mechanisms underlying early trophoblast development. Recently, by using a microarray approach, Marchand and colleagues investigated gene expression during differentiation of hESCs into the trophoblast lineage upon addition of Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 for 10 days and identified 670 genes that were up-regulated from day 0 to day 10. By intersecting these genes with those we found to be up-regulated in TE cells isolated from day 5 embryos, we found 104 common genes among which there were not only trophoblast markers, but also many genes implicated in lipid metabolism and estrogen biosynthesis. This finding validates the importance of metabolic genes during TE specification. Aghajanova et al. compared the transcriptome of embryo-derived TE cells with that of hESC-derived TE cells and found that most of the shared genes were involved in the development of receptive endometrium during implantation. Suzuki et al. used human embryonic carcinoma cells, which can differentiate PubMed ID:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22202440 into TE cells, as an experimental model to investigate the molecular mechanism of trophoectoderm differentiation. Thus, comparative studies using human TE and hESC or G3 cells are relevant to better understand the molecular basis of cell fate decisions and to develop models of human TE development. The ��day 3 embryo molecular signature��was enriched in genes from the NLRP family which might play a role in early embryo development. Indeed, NLRP5, NLRP8 and NLRP9 are expressed in bovine and human pre-implantation embryos and, in pregnant NLRP5 null female mice, Transcriptome Analysis of Embryo and Trophectoderm Probesets 1552531_a_at 242334_at 214957_at 1556096_s_at 207443_at 1553619_a_at 1552405_at 209160_at 1552456_a_at 1557085_at 39318_at 234393_at 1552912_a_at 1552852_a_at 226117_at 222361_at 229105_at 225626_at 1557544_at 210634_at 206343_s_at 207213_s_at 1563120_at 237131_at 221630_s_at 241550_at 217365_at 1570337_at 206140_at 229738_at 209785_s_at 237613_at 236914_at 210467_x_at 242128_at 220535_at 215048_at 207934_at 209994_s_at 207227_x_at 238218_at 214603_at 217590_s_at 208312_s_at 223866_at 216001_at Gene Name NALP11 NALP4 ACTL8 UNC13C NR2E1 TRIM43 NALP5 AKR1C3 MBD3L2 TMEM122 TCL1A HDAC9 IL23R ZSCAN4 TIFA LOC643224 GPR39 PAG1 C10orf80 KLHL20 NRG1 USP2 Hs.623820 LOC645469 DDX4 DPPA5 PRAMEF5 FIGLA LHX2 DNAH10 PLA2G4C FOXR1 AW080028 MAGEA12 OTX2 FAM90A1 SUHW2 RFPL1 ABCB1 RFPL2 LOC648473 MAGEA2 TRPA1 PRAMEF1 ARMC2 LOC390999 Gene Title NLR family, pyrin domain containing 11 NLR family, pyrin domain containing 4 actin-like 8 unc-13 homolog C UniGene Hs.375039 Hs.631533 Hs.2149 Hs.443456 Chromosomal Location MedChemExpress ZM 447439 chr19q13.42 chr19q13.42 chr1p36.2-p35 chr15q21.3 chr6q21 chr2q11.1 chr19q13.42 chr10p15-p14 chr19p13.2 chr11q12.1 chr14q32.1 chr7p21.1 chr1p31.3 chr19q13.43 chr4q25 chr9q34.3 chr2q21-q22 chr8q21.13 chr10q25.1 chr1q24.1-q24.3 chr8p21-p12 chr11q23.3 Fold change 1893 892 755 663 625 519 448 431 394 387 342 315 306 282 275 273 255 230 209 206 184 182 175 FDR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0