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Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications

Despite the importance of placenta in mediating rapid physiological changes in pregnancy, data on temporal dynamics of placental gene expression are limited. We completed the first transcriptome profiling of human placental gene expression dynamics (GeneChips, Affymetrix®; ∼47,000 transcripts) from...

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Autores principales: Uusküla, Liis, Männik, Jaana, Rull, Kristiina, Minajeva, Ave, Kõks, Sulev, Vaas, Pille, Teesalu, Pille, Reimand, Jüri, Laan, Maris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492272/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23145134
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049248
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author Uusküla, Liis
Männik, Jaana
Rull, Kristiina
Minajeva, Ave
Kõks, Sulev
Vaas, Pille
Teesalu, Pille
Reimand, Jüri
Laan, Maris
author_facet Uusküla, Liis
Männik, Jaana
Rull, Kristiina
Minajeva, Ave
Kõks, Sulev
Vaas, Pille
Teesalu, Pille
Reimand, Jüri
Laan, Maris
author_sort Uusküla, Liis
collection PubMed
description Despite the importance of placenta in mediating rapid physiological changes in pregnancy, data on temporal dynamics of placental gene expression are limited. We completed the first transcriptome profiling of human placental gene expression dynamics (GeneChips, Affymetrix®; ∼47,000 transcripts) from early to mid-gestation (n = 10; gestational weeks 5–18) and report 154 genes with significant transcriptional changes (ANOVA, FDR P<0.1). TaqMan RT-qPCR analysis (n = 43; gestational weeks 5–41) confirmed a significant (ANOVA and t-test, FDR P<0.05) mid-gestational peak of placental gene expression for BMP5, CCNG2, CDH11, FST, GATM, GPR183, ITGBL1, PLAGL1, SLC16A10 and STC1, followed by sharp decrease in mRNA levels at term (t-test, FDR P<0.05). We hypothesized that normal course of late pregnancy may be affected when genes characteristic to mid-gestation placenta remain highly expressed until term, and analyzed their expression in term placentas from normal and complicated pregnancies [preeclampsia (PE), n = 12; gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), n = 12; small- and large-for-gestational-age newborns (SGA, LGA), n = 12+12]. STC1 (stanniocalcin 1) exhibited increased mRNA levels in all studied complications, with the most significant effect in PE- and SGA-groups (t-test, FDR P<0.05). In post-partum maternal plasma, the highest STC1 hormone levels (ELISA, n = 129) were found in women who had developed PE and delivered a SGA newborn (median 731 vs 418 pg/ml in controls; ANCOVA, P = 0.00048). Significantly higher expression (t-test, FDR P<0.05) of CCNG2 and LYPD6 accompanied with enhanced immunostaining of the protein was detected in placental sections of PE and GDM cases (n = 15). Our study demonstrates the importance of temporal dynamics of placental transcriptional regulation across three trimesters of gestation. Interestingly, many genes with high expression in mid-gestation placenta have also been implicated in adult complex disease, promoting the discussion on the role of placenta in developmental programming. The discovery of elevated maternal plasma STC1 in pregnancy complications warrants further investigations of its potential as a biomarker.
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spelling pubmed-34922722012-11-09 Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications Uusküla, Liis Männik, Jaana Rull, Kristiina Minajeva, Ave Kõks, Sulev Vaas, Pille Teesalu, Pille Reimand, Jüri Laan, Maris PLoS One Research Article Despite the importance of placenta in mediating rapid physiological changes in pregnancy, data on temporal dynamics of placental gene expression are limited. We completed the first transcriptome profiling of human placental gene expression dynamics (GeneChips, Affymetrix®; ∼47,000 transcripts) from early to mid-gestation (n = 10; gestational weeks 5–18) and report 154 genes with significant transcriptional changes (ANOVA, FDR P<0.1). TaqMan RT-qPCR analysis (n = 43; gestational weeks 5–41) confirmed a significant (ANOVA and t-test, FDR P<0.05) mid-gestational peak of placental gene expression for BMP5, CCNG2, CDH11, FST, GATM, GPR183, ITGBL1, PLAGL1, SLC16A10 and STC1, followed by sharp decrease in mRNA levels at term (t-test, FDR P<0.05). We hypothesized that normal course of late pregnancy may be affected when genes characteristic to mid-gestation placenta remain highly expressed until term, and analyzed their expression in term placentas from normal and complicated pregnancies [preeclampsia (PE), n = 12; gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), n = 12; small- and large-for-gestational-age newborns (SGA, LGA), n = 12+12]. STC1 (stanniocalcin 1) exhibited increased mRNA levels in all studied complications, with the most significant effect in PE- and SGA-groups (t-test, FDR P<0.05). In post-partum maternal plasma, the highest STC1 hormone levels (ELISA, n = 129) were found in women who had developed PE and delivered a SGA newborn (median 731 vs 418 pg/ml in controls; ANCOVA, P = 0.00048). Significantly higher expression (t-test, FDR P<0.05) of CCNG2 and LYPD6 accompanied with enhanced immunostaining of the protein was detected in placental sections of PE and GDM cases (n = 15). Our study demonstrates the importance of temporal dynamics of placental transcriptional regulation across three trimesters of gestation. Interestingly, many genes with high expression in mid-gestation placenta have also been implicated in adult complex disease, promoting the discussion on the role of placenta in developmental programming. The discovery of elevated maternal plasma STC1 in pregnancy complications warrants further investigations of its potential as a biomarker. Public Library of Science 2012-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3492272/ /pubmed/23145134 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049248 Text en © 2012 Uusküla 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
Uusküla, Liis
Männik, Jaana
Rull, Kristiina
Minajeva, Ave
Kõks, Sulev
Vaas, Pille
Teesalu, Pille
Reimand, Jüri
Laan, Maris
Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title_full Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title_fullStr Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title_full_unstemmed Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title_short Mid-Gestational Gene Expression Profile in Placenta and Link to Pregnancy Complications
title_sort mid-gestational gene expression profile in placenta and link to pregnancy complications
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492272/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23145134
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049248
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