Conventional belief holds that an immune response to ejaculate antigens should interfere with fertilisation and establishment of pregnancy. However, emerging evidence now supports the opposing view-that insemination acts to activate maternal immune mechanisms exerting a positive effect on reproductive events. In a response well documented in rodents, semen triggers an influx of antigen-presenting cells into the female reproductive tract which process and present paternal ejaculate antigens to elicit activation of lymphocytes in the adaptive immune compartment. Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta), a cytokine present in abundance in seminal plasma, initiates this inflammatory response by stimulating the synthesis of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in uterine tissues. Lymphocyte activation is evident in lymph nodes draining the uterus and leads to hypo-responsiveness in T-cells reactive with paternal alloantigens. TGFbeta has potent immune-deviating effects and is likely to be the key agent in skewing the immune response against a Type-1 bias. Prior exposure to semen in the context of TGFbeta can be shown to be associated with enhanced fetal-placental development late in gestation. In this paper, we review the experimental basis for these claims and propose the hypothesis that, in women, the partner-specific protective effect of insemination in pre-eclampsia might be explained by induction of immunological hypo-responsiveness conferring tolerance to histocompatibility antigens present in the ejaculate and shared by the conceptus.