학술논문

Altered placental immune cell composition and gene expression with isolated fetal spina bifida.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Reproductive Immunology. Mar2024, Vol. 91 Issue 3, p1-13. 13p.
Subject
*GENE expression
*SPINA bifida
*NUCLEIC acid hybridization
*PREGNANT women
*FOLIC acid
*PLACENTA
*GLATIRAMER acetate
*BODY mass index
Language
ISSN
1046-7408
Abstract
Problem: Fetal spina bifida (SB) is more common in pregnant people with folate deficiency or anomalies of folate metabolism. It is also known that fetuses with SB have a higher risk of low birthweight, a condition that is typically placental‐mediated. We therefore hypothesized that fetal SB would associate with altered expression of key placental folate transporters and an increase in Hofbauer cells (HBCs), which are folate‐dependent placental macrophages. Method of study: Folate receptor‐α (FRα), proton coupled folate receptor (PCFT), and reduced folate carrier (RFC) protein localization and expression (immunohistochemistry) and HBC phenotypes (HBC abundance and folate receptor‐β [FRβ] expression; RNA in situ hybridization) were assessed in placentae from fetuses with SB (cases; n = 12) and in term (n = 10) and gestational age (GA) – and maternal body mass index – matched (n = 12) controls without congenital anomalies. Results: Cases had a higher proportion of placental villous cells that were HBCs (6.9% vs. 2.4%, p =.0001) and higher average HBC FRβ expression (3.2 mRNA molecules per HBC vs. 2.3, p =.03) than GA‐matched controls. HBCs in cases were largely polarized to a regulatory phenotype (median 92.1% of HBCs). In sex‐stratified analyses, only male cases had higher HBC levels and HBC FRβ expression than GA‐matched controls. There were no differences between groups in the total percent of syncytium and stromal cells that were positive for FRα, PCFT, or RFC protein immunolabeling. Conclusions: HBC abundance and FRβ expression by HBCs are increased in placentae of fetuses with SB, suggesting immune‐mediated dysregulation in placental phenotype, and could contribute to SB‐associated comorbidities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]