Cargando…

The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies

In mammalian pregnancy, maternal cardiovascular adaptations must match the requirements of the growing fetus(es), and respond to physiologic and pathologic conditions. Such adaptations are particularly demanding for mammals bearing large-litter pregnancies, with their inherent conflict between the i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Raz, Tal, Avni, Reut, Addadi, Yoseph, Cohen, Yoni, Jaffa, Ariel J., Hemmings, Brian, Garbow, Joel R., Neeman, Michal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3527527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23284965
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052273
_version_ 1782253742999994368
author Raz, Tal
Avni, Reut
Addadi, Yoseph
Cohen, Yoni
Jaffa, Ariel J.
Hemmings, Brian
Garbow, Joel R.
Neeman, Michal
author_facet Raz, Tal
Avni, Reut
Addadi, Yoseph
Cohen, Yoni
Jaffa, Ariel J.
Hemmings, Brian
Garbow, Joel R.
Neeman, Michal
author_sort Raz, Tal
collection PubMed
description In mammalian pregnancy, maternal cardiovascular adaptations must match the requirements of the growing fetus(es), and respond to physiologic and pathologic conditions. Such adaptations are particularly demanding for mammals bearing large-litter pregnancies, with their inherent conflict between the interests of each individual fetus and the welfare of the entire progeny. The mouse is the most common animal model used to study development and genetics, as well as pregnancy-related diseases. Previous studies suggested that in mice, maternal blood flow to the placentas occurs via a single arterial uterine loop generated by arterial-arterial anastomosis of the uterine artery to the uterine branch of the ovarian artery, resulting in counter bi-directional blood flow. However, we provide here experimental evidence that each placenta is actually supplied by two distinct arterial inputs stemming from the uterine artery and from the uterine branch of the ovarian artery, with position-dependent contribution of flow from each source. Moreover, we report significant positional- and inter-fetal dependent alteration of placental perfusion, which were detected by in vivo MRI and fluorescence imaging. Maternal blood flow to the placentas was dependent on litter size and was attenuated for placentas located centrally along the uterine horn. Distinctive apposing, inter-fetal hemodynamic effects of either reduced or elevated maternal blood flow, were measured for placenta of normal fetuses that are positioned adjacent to either pathological, or to hypovascular Akt1-deficient placentas, respectively. The results reported here underscore the critical importance of confounding local and systemic in utero effects on phenotype presentation, in general and in the setting of genetically modified mice. The unique robustness and plasticity of the uterine vasculature architecture, as reported in this study, can explain the ability to accommodate varying litter sizes, sustain large-litter pregnancies and overcome pathologic challenges. Remarkably, the dual arterial supply is evolutionary conserved in mammals bearing a single offspring, including primates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3527527
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-35275272013-01-02 The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies Raz, Tal Avni, Reut Addadi, Yoseph Cohen, Yoni Jaffa, Ariel J. Hemmings, Brian Garbow, Joel R. Neeman, Michal PLoS One Research Article In mammalian pregnancy, maternal cardiovascular adaptations must match the requirements of the growing fetus(es), and respond to physiologic and pathologic conditions. Such adaptations are particularly demanding for mammals bearing large-litter pregnancies, with their inherent conflict between the interests of each individual fetus and the welfare of the entire progeny. The mouse is the most common animal model used to study development and genetics, as well as pregnancy-related diseases. Previous studies suggested that in mice, maternal blood flow to the placentas occurs via a single arterial uterine loop generated by arterial-arterial anastomosis of the uterine artery to the uterine branch of the ovarian artery, resulting in counter bi-directional blood flow. However, we provide here experimental evidence that each placenta is actually supplied by two distinct arterial inputs stemming from the uterine artery and from the uterine branch of the ovarian artery, with position-dependent contribution of flow from each source. Moreover, we report significant positional- and inter-fetal dependent alteration of placental perfusion, which were detected by in vivo MRI and fluorescence imaging. Maternal blood flow to the placentas was dependent on litter size and was attenuated for placentas located centrally along the uterine horn. Distinctive apposing, inter-fetal hemodynamic effects of either reduced or elevated maternal blood flow, were measured for placenta of normal fetuses that are positioned adjacent to either pathological, or to hypovascular Akt1-deficient placentas, respectively. The results reported here underscore the critical importance of confounding local and systemic in utero effects on phenotype presentation, in general and in the setting of genetically modified mice. The unique robustness and plasticity of the uterine vasculature architecture, as reported in this study, can explain the ability to accommodate varying litter sizes, sustain large-litter pregnancies and overcome pathologic challenges. Remarkably, the dual arterial supply is evolutionary conserved in mammals bearing a single offspring, including primates. Public Library of Science 2012-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3527527/ /pubmed/23284965 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052273 Text en © 2012 Raz 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
Raz, Tal
Avni, Reut
Addadi, Yoseph
Cohen, Yoni
Jaffa, Ariel J.
Hemmings, Brian
Garbow, Joel R.
Neeman, Michal
The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title_full The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title_fullStr The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title_full_unstemmed The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title_short The Hemodynamic Basis for Positional- and Inter-Fetal Dependent Effects in Dual Arterial Supply of Mouse Pregnancies
title_sort hemodynamic basis for positional- and inter-fetal dependent effects in dual arterial supply of mouse pregnancies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3527527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23284965
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052273
work_keys_str_mv AT raztal thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT avnireut thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT addadiyoseph thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT cohenyoni thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT jaffaarielj thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT hemmingsbrian thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT garbowjoelr thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT neemanmichal thehemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT raztal hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT avnireut hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT addadiyoseph hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT cohenyoni hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT jaffaarielj hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT hemmingsbrian hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT garbowjoelr hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies
AT neemanmichal hemodynamicbasisforpositionalandinterfetaldependenteffectsindualarterialsupplyofmousepregnancies