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Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health

Amniotic fluid is essential for fetus wellbeing and is used to monitor pregnancy and predict fetal outcomes. Sex affects health and medicine from the beginning of life, but knowledge of its influence on cell-depleted amniotic fluid (AF) and amniotic fluid cells (AFCs) is still neglected. We evaluate...

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Autores principales: Campesi, Ilaria, Capobianco, Giampiero, Cano, Antonella, Lodde, Valeria, Cruciani, Sara, Maioli, Margherita, Sotgiu, Giovanni, Idda, Maria Laura, Puci, Mariangela Valentina, Ruoppolo, Margherita, Costanzo, Michele, Caterino, Marianna, Cambosu, Francesca, Montella, Andrea, Franconi, Flavia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10604128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37893203
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11102830
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author Campesi, Ilaria
Capobianco, Giampiero
Cano, Antonella
Lodde, Valeria
Cruciani, Sara
Maioli, Margherita
Sotgiu, Giovanni
Idda, Maria Laura
Puci, Mariangela Valentina
Ruoppolo, Margherita
Costanzo, Michele
Caterino, Marianna
Cambosu, Francesca
Montella, Andrea
Franconi, Flavia
author_facet Campesi, Ilaria
Capobianco, Giampiero
Cano, Antonella
Lodde, Valeria
Cruciani, Sara
Maioli, Margherita
Sotgiu, Giovanni
Idda, Maria Laura
Puci, Mariangela Valentina
Ruoppolo, Margherita
Costanzo, Michele
Caterino, Marianna
Cambosu, Francesca
Montella, Andrea
Franconi, Flavia
author_sort Campesi, Ilaria
collection PubMed
description Amniotic fluid is essential for fetus wellbeing and is used to monitor pregnancy and predict fetal outcomes. Sex affects health and medicine from the beginning of life, but knowledge of its influence on cell-depleted amniotic fluid (AF) and amniotic fluid cells (AFCs) is still neglected. We evaluated sex-related differences in AF and in AFCs to extend personalized medicine to prenatal life. AFCs and AF were obtained from healthy Caucasian pregnant women who underwent amniocentesis at the 16th–18th week of gestation for advanced maternal age. In the AF, inflammation biomarkers (TNFα, IL6, IL8, and IL4), malondialdehyde, nitrites, amino acids, and acylcarnitines were measured. Estrogen receptors and cell fate (autophagy, apoptosis, senescence) were measured in AFCs. TNFα, IL8, and IL4 were higher in female AF, whereas IL6, nitrites, and MDA were similar. Valine was higher in male AF, whereas several acylcarnitines were sexually different, suggesting a mitochondrial involvement in establishing sex differences. Female AFCs displayed higher expression of ERα protein and a higher ERα/ERβ ratio. The ratio of LC3II/I, an index of autophagy, was higher in female AFCs, while LC3 gene was similar in both sexes. No significant sex differences were found in the expression of the lysosomal protein LAMP1, while p62 was higher in male AFCs. LAMP1 gene was upregulated in male AFCs, while p62 gene was upregulated in female ones. Finally, caspase 9 activity and senescence linked to telomeres were higher in female AFCs, while caspase 3 and β-galactosidase activities were similar. This study supports the idea that sex differences start very early in prenatal life and influence specific parameters, suggesting that it may be relevant to appreciate sex differences to cover knowledge gaps. This might lead to improving the diagnosis of risk prediction for pregnancy complications and achieving a more satisfactory monitoring of fetus health, even preventing future diseases in adulthood.
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spelling pubmed-106041282023-10-28 Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health Campesi, Ilaria Capobianco, Giampiero Cano, Antonella Lodde, Valeria Cruciani, Sara Maioli, Margherita Sotgiu, Giovanni Idda, Maria Laura Puci, Mariangela Valentina Ruoppolo, Margherita Costanzo, Michele Caterino, Marianna Cambosu, Francesca Montella, Andrea Franconi, Flavia Biomedicines Article Amniotic fluid is essential for fetus wellbeing and is used to monitor pregnancy and predict fetal outcomes. Sex affects health and medicine from the beginning of life, but knowledge of its influence on cell-depleted amniotic fluid (AF) and amniotic fluid cells (AFCs) is still neglected. We evaluated sex-related differences in AF and in AFCs to extend personalized medicine to prenatal life. AFCs and AF were obtained from healthy Caucasian pregnant women who underwent amniocentesis at the 16th–18th week of gestation for advanced maternal age. In the AF, inflammation biomarkers (TNFα, IL6, IL8, and IL4), malondialdehyde, nitrites, amino acids, and acylcarnitines were measured. Estrogen receptors and cell fate (autophagy, apoptosis, senescence) were measured in AFCs. TNFα, IL8, and IL4 were higher in female AF, whereas IL6, nitrites, and MDA were similar. Valine was higher in male AF, whereas several acylcarnitines were sexually different, suggesting a mitochondrial involvement in establishing sex differences. Female AFCs displayed higher expression of ERα protein and a higher ERα/ERβ ratio. The ratio of LC3II/I, an index of autophagy, was higher in female AFCs, while LC3 gene was similar in both sexes. No significant sex differences were found in the expression of the lysosomal protein LAMP1, while p62 was higher in male AFCs. LAMP1 gene was upregulated in male AFCs, while p62 gene was upregulated in female ones. Finally, caspase 9 activity and senescence linked to telomeres were higher in female AFCs, while caspase 3 and β-galactosidase activities were similar. This study supports the idea that sex differences start very early in prenatal life and influence specific parameters, suggesting that it may be relevant to appreciate sex differences to cover knowledge gaps. This might lead to improving the diagnosis of risk prediction for pregnancy complications and achieving a more satisfactory monitoring of fetus health, even preventing future diseases in adulthood. MDPI 2023-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10604128/ /pubmed/37893203 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11102830 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Campesi, Ilaria
Capobianco, Giampiero
Cano, Antonella
Lodde, Valeria
Cruciani, Sara
Maioli, Margherita
Sotgiu, Giovanni
Idda, Maria Laura
Puci, Mariangela Valentina
Ruoppolo, Margherita
Costanzo, Michele
Caterino, Marianna
Cambosu, Francesca
Montella, Andrea
Franconi, Flavia
Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title_full Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title_fullStr Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title_full_unstemmed Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title_short Stratification of Amniotic Fluid Cells and Amniotic Fluid by Sex Opens Up New Perspectives on Fetal Health
title_sort stratification of amniotic fluid cells and amniotic fluid by sex opens up new perspectives on fetal health
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10604128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37893203
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11102830
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