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Sex modifies placental gene expression in response to metabolic and inflammatory stress.

Citation
Barke, T. L., et al. “Sex Modifies Placental Gene Expression In Response To Metabolic And Inflammatory Stress.”. Placenta, pp. 1-9.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Theresa L Barke, Kelli M Money, Liping Du, Ana Serezani, Maureen Gannon, Karoly Mirnics, David M Aronoff
Keywords diabetes, Fetal origins, immunology, Infection, Maternal-child health
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Metabolic stress (e.g., gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and obesity) and infections are common during pregnancy, impacting fetal development and the health of offspring. Such antenatal stresses can differentially impact male and female offspring. We sought to determine how metabolic stress and maternal immune activation (MIA), either alone or in combination, alters inflammatory gene expression within the placenta and whether the effects exhibited sexual dimorphism.

METHODS: Female C57BL/6 J mice were fed a normal diet or a high fat diet for 6 weeks prior to mating, with the latter diet inducing a GDM phenotype during pregnancy. Dams within each diet group at gestational day (GD) 12.5 received either an intraperitoneal injection of the viral mimic, polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (poly(I:C)) or saline. Three hours post injection; placentae were collected and analyzed for changes in the expression of 248 unique immune genes.

RESULTS: Placental immune gene expression was significantly altered by GDM, MIA and the combination of the two (GDM+MIA). mRNA expression was generally lower in placentae of mice exposed to GDM alone compared with the other experimental groups, while mice exposed to MIA exhibited the highest transcript levels. Notably, fetal/placental sex influenced the responses of many immune genes to both metabolic and inflammatory stress.

DISCUSSION: GDM and MIA provoke inflammatory responses within the placenta and such effects exhibit sexual dimorphism. The combination of these stressors impacts the placenta differently than either condition alone. These findings may help explain sexual dimorphism observed in adverse pregnancy outcomes in human offspring exposed to similar stressors.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Placenta
Volume
78
Number of Pages
1-9
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1532-3102
DOI
10.1016/j.placenta.2019.02.008
Alternate Journal
Placenta
PMID
30955704
PMCID
PMC6461364
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