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Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women

BACKGROUND: Pregnancy induces physiological adaptations that may involve, or contribute to, alterations in the genomic landscape. Pregnancy also increases the nutritional demand for choline, an essential nutrient that can modulate epigenomic and transcriptomic readouts secondary to its role as a met...

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Autores principales: Jiang, Xinyin, Bar, Haim Y., Yan, Jian, West, Allyson A., Perry, Cydne A., Malysheva, Olga V., Devapatla, Srisatish, Pressman, Eva, Vermeylen, Francoise M., Wells, Martin T., Caudill, Marie A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3487782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23133592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0046736
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author Jiang, Xinyin
Bar, Haim Y.
Yan, Jian
West, Allyson A.
Perry, Cydne A.
Malysheva, Olga V.
Devapatla, Srisatish
Pressman, Eva
Vermeylen, Francoise M.
Wells, Martin T.
Caudill, Marie A.
author_facet Jiang, Xinyin
Bar, Haim Y.
Yan, Jian
West, Allyson A.
Perry, Cydne A.
Malysheva, Olga V.
Devapatla, Srisatish
Pressman, Eva
Vermeylen, Francoise M.
Wells, Martin T.
Caudill, Marie A.
author_sort Jiang, Xinyin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pregnancy induces physiological adaptations that may involve, or contribute to, alterations in the genomic landscape. Pregnancy also increases the nutritional demand for choline, an essential nutrient that can modulate epigenomic and transcriptomic readouts secondary to its role as a methyl donor. Nevertheless, the interplay between human pregnancy, choline and the human genome is largely unexplored. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: As part of a controlled feeding study, we assessed the influence of pregnancy and choline intake on maternal genomic markers. Healthy third trimester pregnant (n = 26, wk 26–29 gestation) and nonpregnant (n = 21) women were randomized to choline intakes of 480 mg/day, approximating the Adequate Intake level, or 930 mg/day for 12-weeks. Blood leukocytes were acquired at study week 0 and study week 12 for microarray, DNA damage and global DNA/histone methylation measurements. A main effect of pregnancy that was independent of choline intake was detected on several of the maternal leukocyte genomic markers. Compared to nonpregnant women, third trimester pregnant women exhibited higher (P<0.05) transcript abundance of defense response genes associated with the innate immune system including pattern recognition molecules, neutrophil granule proteins and oxidases, complement proteins, cytokines and chemokines. Pregnant women also exhibited higher (P<0.001) levels of DNA damage in blood leukocytes, a genomic marker of oxidative stress. No effect of choline intake was detected on the maternal leukocyte genomic markers with the exception of histone 3 lysine 4 di-methylation which was lower among pregnant women in the 930 versus 480 mg/d choline intake group. CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy induces transcriptional activation of the peripheral innate immune system and increases oxidative DNA damage among healthy third trimester pregnant women.
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spelling pubmed-34877822012-11-06 Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women Jiang, Xinyin Bar, Haim Y. Yan, Jian West, Allyson A. Perry, Cydne A. Malysheva, Olga V. Devapatla, Srisatish Pressman, Eva Vermeylen, Francoise M. Wells, Martin T. Caudill, Marie A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Pregnancy induces physiological adaptations that may involve, or contribute to, alterations in the genomic landscape. Pregnancy also increases the nutritional demand for choline, an essential nutrient that can modulate epigenomic and transcriptomic readouts secondary to its role as a methyl donor. Nevertheless, the interplay between human pregnancy, choline and the human genome is largely unexplored. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: As part of a controlled feeding study, we assessed the influence of pregnancy and choline intake on maternal genomic markers. Healthy third trimester pregnant (n = 26, wk 26–29 gestation) and nonpregnant (n = 21) women were randomized to choline intakes of 480 mg/day, approximating the Adequate Intake level, or 930 mg/day for 12-weeks. Blood leukocytes were acquired at study week 0 and study week 12 for microarray, DNA damage and global DNA/histone methylation measurements. A main effect of pregnancy that was independent of choline intake was detected on several of the maternal leukocyte genomic markers. Compared to nonpregnant women, third trimester pregnant women exhibited higher (P<0.05) transcript abundance of defense response genes associated with the innate immune system including pattern recognition molecules, neutrophil granule proteins and oxidases, complement proteins, cytokines and chemokines. Pregnant women also exhibited higher (P<0.001) levels of DNA damage in blood leukocytes, a genomic marker of oxidative stress. No effect of choline intake was detected on the maternal leukocyte genomic markers with the exception of histone 3 lysine 4 di-methylation which was lower among pregnant women in the 930 versus 480 mg/d choline intake group. CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy induces transcriptional activation of the peripheral innate immune system and increases oxidative DNA damage among healthy third trimester pregnant women. Public Library of Science 2012-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3487782/ /pubmed/23133592 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0046736 Text en © 2012 Jiang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jiang, Xinyin
Bar, Haim Y.
Yan, Jian
West, Allyson A.
Perry, Cydne A.
Malysheva, Olga V.
Devapatla, Srisatish
Pressman, Eva
Vermeylen, Francoise M.
Wells, Martin T.
Caudill, Marie A.
Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title_full Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title_fullStr Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title_full_unstemmed Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title_short Pregnancy Induces Transcriptional Activation of the Peripheral Innate Immune System and Increases Oxidative DNA Damage among Healthy Third Trimester Pregnant Women
title_sort pregnancy induces transcriptional activation of the peripheral innate immune system and increases oxidative dna damage among healthy third trimester pregnant women
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3487782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23133592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0046736
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