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Oxygen is a critical regulator of placentation. Early placental development occurs in a predominantly low oxygen environment and is, at least partially, under the control of hypoxia signaling pathways. In the present study, in vivo hypobaric hypoxia was used as an experimental tool to delineate hypoxia-sensitive events during placentation. Pregnant rats were exposed to the equivalent of 11% oxygen between days 6.5 and 13.5 of gestation. Pair-fed pregnant animals exposed to ambient conditions were included as a control group. Uterine mesometrial blood vessels in the hypoxia-exposed animals were greatly expanded and some contained large cuboidal cells that were positive for cytokeratin and other markers characteristic of invasive trophoblast cells. Unlike later in gestation, the route of trophoblast cell invasion in the hypoxia-exposed animals was restricted to endovascular, with no interstitial invasion observed. Hypoxia-activated endovascular trophoblast invasion required exposure to hypoxia from gestation day 8.5 to day 9.5. Activation of the invasive trophoblast lineage was also associated with an enlargement of the junctional zone of the chorioallantoic placenta, a source of invasive trophoblast cell progenitors. In summary, maternal hypoxia during early stages of placentation activates the invasive endovascular trophoblast cell lineage and promotes uterine vascular remodeling.  相似文献   

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The long-standing question of pregnancy immunological paradox has been generating renewed interest. Recent insights have emerged from studies in pregnant mice and humans demonstrating a number of mechanisms that prevent potentially harmful effects of maternal anti-paternal allo-antibodies (complement inhibition, partial deletion of maternal B cells specific of paternal antigens), cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (lack of HLA-A and HLA-B expression on trophoblast, local immunosuppressive molecules, transient tolerance of paternal allo-antigens specific T cells) and uterine NK cells directed against fetal-derived trophoblast cells (limited NK cytotoxic potential, trophoblast resistance to NK killing). Interestingly, it appears that not only decidual NK cell/trophoblast interactions are not harmful for the fetus but are beneficial for the placental vascularization and its subsequent development. A recent report has indeed demonstrated that during pregnancy most of the combinations of uterine KIR (killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor) NK cell receptors and fetal HLA-C molecules expressed by trophoblast led to normal pregnancies, whereas mothers lacking activating KIR of the AA genotype when the fetus possessed HLA-C of the C2 group were at a greatly increased risk of severe preeclampsia pathology.  相似文献   

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Human CD56(bright) NK cells accumulate in the maternal decidua during pregnancy and are found in direct contact with fetal trophoblasts. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the inability of NK cells to kill the semiallogeneic fetal cells. However, the actual functions of decidual NK (dNK) cells during pregnancy are mostly unknown. Here we show that dNK cells, but not peripheral blood-derived NK subsets, regulate trophoblast invasion both in vitro and in vivo by production of the interleukin-8 and interferon-inducible protein-10 chemokines. Furthermore, dNK cells are potent secretors of an array of angiogenic factors and induce vascular growth in the decidua. Notably, such functions are regulated by specific interactions between dNK-activating and dNK-inhibitory receptors and their ligands, uniquely expressed at the fetal-maternal interface. The overall results support a 'peaceful' model for reproductive immunology, in which elements of innate immunity have been incorporated in a constructive manner to support reproductive tissue development.  相似文献   

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Immunogenetic studies suggest that interactions between maternal killer Ig-like receptor (KIR) expressed by uterine NK (uNK) cells, and fetal HLA-C molecules on trophoblast, influence the success of human placentation. However, the exact functional response of fresh uNK cells to trophoblast HLA-C molecules is unknown. In this study, we show by quantitative RT-PCR and FACS that both activating and inhibitory KIR specific for HLA-C are expressed at higher levels and on an increased proportion of NK cells in the human decidua compared with blood. In contrast, expression of KIR3DL1/S1, which is specific for HLA-B, is similar in both NK cell populations. Remarkably, there is also a temporal change in the expression pattern of HLA-C-specific KIR, with a decline in both intensity of expression and frequency on uNK cells throughout the first trimester of pregnancy. This selective up-regulation of KIR has functional consequences because uNK cells show increased binding of HLA-C tetramers compared with blood NK cells. Ab cross-linking shows that these KIR are functional and results in increased cytokine secretion. uNK cells, therefore, exhibit a unique KIR profile that enhances their ability to recognize trophoblast cells expressing HLA-C at the materno-fetal interface. This is the first report to demonstrate selective regulation of KIR expression over time in vivo in a normal physiological situation and suggests that KIR expression by uNK cells is regulated by the tissue microenvironment in the decidua.  相似文献   

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Cells of the trophoblast lineage make up the epithelial compartment of the placenta, and their rapid development is essential for the establishment and maintenance of pregnancy. A diverse array of specialized trophoblast subtypes form throughout gestation and are responsible for mediating implantation, as well as promotion of blood to the implantation site, changes in maternal physiology, and nutrient and gas exchange between the fetal and maternal blood supplies. Within the last decade, targeted mutations in mice and the study of trophoblast stem cells in vitro have contributed greatly to our understanding of trophoblast lineage development. Here, we review recent insights into the molecular pathways regulating trophoblast lineage segregation, stem cell maintenance, and subtype differentiation.  相似文献   

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Normal human fetal development requires an adequate supply of thyroid hormone from conception. Until about 16 wk gestation this is supplied entirely by placental transfer of maternal hormone. Subsequently, the fetal thyroid synthesizes thyroid hormones, requiring a supply of maternal iodide. Trophoblast iodide transfer is mediated by the apical sodium iodide symporter (NIS). Placental oxygen levels are low in early pregnancy (~1%), rising with placental vascularisation to a plateau of ~8% at about 16 wk. Although the impact of these changing oxygen levels on placental implantation is well recognized, effects on trophoblast materno-fetal exchange are less understood. We investigated expression of the NIS regulator hCG, NIS mRNA expression, and I(125) uptake in choriocarcinoma BeWo cells (a model of the trophoblast) cultured in 1 and 8% oxygen and in room air (21% oxygen). Expression of NIS and hCG mRNA and protein was low at 1% oxygen but rose significantly at 8 and at 21%. This was reflected in significant increases in I(125) uptake. Desferrioxamine, an iron chelator and hypoxia mimic, decreased NIS and hCG expression and I(125) uptake in BeWo cells. NIS expression and I(125) uptake in cells grown at 1% oxygen were not increased by addition of hCG (2,500 IU/l). We infer that placental NIS mRNA and protein expression are regulated by oxygen, rising with vascularization of the placenta in the late first trimester, a time when fetal iodide requirements are increasing.  相似文献   

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Epidemiological evidence suggests that size at birth may affect health in later life. The growth of the fetus may be adversely affected by a suboptimal maternal environment. Understanding placental development and function will help unravel the mechanisms controlling fetal growth. This article poses the problem: how does the maternal environment (uterine or systemic) influence placental development? Critical human placental functions include remodelling maternal uterine spiral arteries to increase the flow of blood to the maternofetal interface, and transferring oxygen and nutrients into the fetal vasculature, all processes involving trophoblast. Gene ablations that affect pregnancy outcome in mice lead to some interesting hypotheses.  相似文献   

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The ability of fetal trophoblast cells in the placenta to resist cell-mediated lysis may be important for successful pregnancy. Previous studies in this laboratory demonstrated that cultured midterm mouse trophoblast cells are not susceptible to allospecific CTL generated by standard in vitro protocols, to antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, or to naive or IFN-activated NK cells, despite expressing the requisite target structures. However, we now report that murine trophoblast can be killed, in a non-MHC-specific manner, by LAK cells. Normal mouse spleen cells cultured for 4 days in IL-2-containing lymphokine preparations characteristically killed both NK-sensitive (YAC-1) and NK-resistant (EL4, P815) target cells, and mediated significant lysis of both cultured and freshly isolated trophoblast cells (35 to 55%, E/T 100/1). Pretreatment of the LAK cells with anti-ASGM1 antibody and C markedly reduced the lysis of trophoblast and YAC-1 targets, suggesting that the responsible cells belonged to the NK lineage. The ability of IL-2-activated NK cells to kill midterm murine trophoblast cells was confirmed using a population of highly lytic NK cells generated by culturing spleen cells from severe combined immunodeficiency mice in 500 U/ml rIL-2 for 5 days. These effector cells killed YAC-1, EL4 and P815 target cells at much lower E/T ratios than was achieved with the normal splenic LAK cells, and mediated significant lysis of both freshly isolated (45 to 50%, E/T 20/1) and cultured trophoblast cells (68 to 76%, E/T 20/1). The susceptibility of trophoblast to LAK cells and IL-2-activated NK cells supports the need for suppressor mechanisms regulating IL-2 activity at the maternal-fetal interface.  相似文献   

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HLA-G is a non-classical major histocompatibility complex class I molecule selectively expressed on extravillous trophoblast cells at the fetal—maternal interface. HLA-G may play an important role in maintaining maternal immune tolerance of the semi-allogenic fetus. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time the protective role of HLA-G during pregnancy. Indeed, cytotrophoblast cells of the fetus are resistant to lytic activity by maternal decidual natural killer cells. In order to precisely characterize the immunological functions of HLA-G products, we have investigated the protective role of the membrane-bound HLA-G1 and HLA-G2 isoforms against NK cell cytotoxicity. For this purpose, HLA-G1 and HLA-G2 cDNAs were transfected into the HLA-class I negative human K562 cell line. We demonstrate that both HLA-G1 and HLA-G2 transfectants inhibit NK cytolysis observed in peripheral blood from 25 donors (males and females). This led us to the conjecture that HLA-G is the public ligand for natural killer inhibitory receptors present in all individuals.  相似文献   

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The maternal vasculature within the placenta in primates and rodents is unique because it is lined by fetal cells of the trophoblast lineage and not by maternal endothelial cells. In addition to trophoblast cells that invade the uterine spiral arteries that bring blood into the placenta, other trophoblast subtypes sit at different levels of the vascular space. In mice, at least five distinct subtypes of trophoblast cells have been identified which engage maternal endothelial cells on the arterial and venous frontiers of the placenta, but which also form the channel-like spaces within it through a process analogous to formation of blood vessels (vasculogenic mimicry). These cells are all large, post-mitotic trophoblast giant cells. In addition to assuming endothelial cell-like characteristics (endothelial mimicry), they produce dozens of different hormones that are thought to regulate local and systemic maternal adaptations to pregnancy. Recent work has identified distinct molecular pathways in mice that regulate the morphogenesis of trophoblast cells on the arterial and venous sides of the vascular circuit that may be analogous to specification of arterial and venous endothelial cells.  相似文献   

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Spiral artery remodeling at the maternal–fetal interface is crucial for successful pregnancy and requires the interaction between the first trimester trophoblast and the endothelial cells of the maternal vessels. However, the precise mechanism of this dialog has yet to be determined. The current study investigated whether lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) modulates trophoblast–endothelial crosstalk in vitro. HTR-8/SVneo trophoblast cell line (H8) was seeded on top of Geltrex, incubated with LPA or LPA + NS-398 (selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor), LPA + 1400W (selective inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor) or LPA + IL-6 neutralizing antibody and assayed for tube formation to model the acquisition of trophoblast endovascular phenotype. The supernatants were collected and used as conditioned media (CM). To test trophoblast–endothelial crosstalk, the endothelial cell line EA.hy926 was incubated with trophoblast CM. The CM from LPA-induced tubulogenesis stimulated endothelial cells migration and did not modify the apoptosis. Soluble factors derived from cyclooxygenase-2 and IL-6 pathways were involved in H8–EA.hy926 interaction under the LPA effect. Moreover, LPA increased the levels of IL-6 mRNA by cyclooxygenase-2 pathway in H8 cells. Collectively, LPA promotes trophoblast–endothelial crosstalk in vitro and induces the release of trophoblast soluble factors that stimulate endothelial cells migration without changes in apoptosis. The evidence presented here provides new insights about an active role of LPA as a lipid mediator regulating vascular remodeling at the maternal–fetal interface.  相似文献   

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Thyroid hormones (THs) must pass from mother to fetus for normal fetal development and require the expression of placental TH transporters. We investigate the compensatory effect of placental organic anion transporting polypeptide 1c1 (Oatp1c1) and monocarboxylate transporter 8 (Mct8) on maternal thyroid dysfunction. We describe the expressions of these two transporters in placental barriers and trophoblastic cell populations in euthyroidism and thyroid dysfunction resulting from differential iodine nutrition at gestation day (GD) 16 and 20, that is, before and after the onset of fetal thyroid function. Immunohistochemistry revealed that in the blood-placenta barrier, these two TH transporters were strongly expressed in the villous interstitial substance and were weakly expressed in trophoblast cells. Levels of Oatp1c1 protein obviously increased in the placental fetal portion during maternal thyroid deficiency at GD16. Under maternal thyroid deficiency after the production of endogenous fetal TH, quantitative PCR analysis revealed down-regulation of Oatp1c1 occurred along with up-regulation of Mct8 in trophoblast cell populations isolated by laser capture microdissection (LCM); this was consistent with the protein levels in the fetal portion of the placenta. In addition, decreased D3 mRNA at GD16 and increased D2 mRNA on two gestational days were observed in trophoblast cells with thyroid dysfunction. However, levels of Oatp1c1 mRNA at GD16 and D3 mRNA at GD20 were too low to be detectable in trophoblast cells. In conclusion, placental Oatp1c1 plays an essential compensatory role when the transplacental passage of maternal THs is insufficient at the stage before the fetal TH production. In addition, the coordinated effects of Oatp1c1, Mct8, D2 and D3 in the placental barrier may regulate both transplacental TH passage and the development of trophoblast cells during thyroid dysfunction throughout the pregnancy.  相似文献   

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Defects in placental development lead to pregnancies at risk for miscarriage and intrauterine growth retardation and are associated with preeclampsia, a leading cause of maternal death and premature birth. In preeclampsia, impaired placental formation has been associated with alterations in a specific trophoblast lineage, the invasive trophoblast cells. In this study, an RT-PCR Trophoblast Gene Expression Profile previously developed by our laboratory was utilized to examine the lineage-specific gene expression of the rat Rcho-1 trophoblast cell line. Our results demonstrated that Rcho-1 cells represent an isolated, trophoblast population committed to the giant cell lineage. RT-PCR analysis revealed that undifferentiated Rcho-1 cells expressed trophoblast stem cell marker, Id2, and trophoblast giant cell markers. On differentiation, Rcho-1 cells downregulated Id2 and upregulated Csh1, a marker of the trophoblast giant cell lineage. Neither undifferentiated nor differentiated Rcho-1 cells expressed spongiotrophoblast marker Tpbpa or labyrinthine markers Esx1 and Tec. Differentiating Rcho-1 cells in hypoxia did not alter the expression of lineage-specific markers; however, hypoxia did inhibit the downregulation of the trophoblast stem cell marker Id2. Differentiation in hypoxia also blocked the induction of CSH1 protein. In addition, hypoxia inhibited stress fiber formation and abolished the induction of palladin, a protein associated with stress fiber formation and focal adhesions. Thus, Rcho-1 cells can be maintained as a proliferative, lineage-specific cell line that is committed to the trophoblast giant cell lineage on differentiation in both normoxic and hypoxic conditions; however, hypoxia does inhibit aspects of trophoblast giant cell differentiation at the molecular, morphological, and functional levels.  相似文献   

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One of the most fascinating immunologic questions is how the genetically distinct fetus is able to survive and develop within the mother without provoking an immune rejection response. The pregnant uterus undergoes rapid morphological and functional changes, and these changes may influence the nature of local immune responses at the maternal/fetal interface at different stages of gestation. We hypothesized that specialized mechanisms exist to control access of maternal leukocyte subsets to the decidua and that these mechanisms are modulated during the course of pregnancy. At the critical period of initial placenta development, the maternal/fetal interface displays an unparalleled compartmentalization of microenvironmental domains associated with highly differentiated vessels expressing vascular addressins in nonoverlapping patterns and with recruitment of specialized leukocyte subsets (monocytes, granulated metrial gland cells, and granulocytes) thought to support, modulate, and regulate trophoblast invasion. One of the most striking observations at this time of gestation is the almost complete exclusion of lymphocytes from the maternal/fetal interface. The second half of pregnancy is characterized by a partial loss of microenvironmental specialization and different switches in vascular specificity within the decidua basalis, paralleling dramatic changes in the populations of recruited leukocytes (e.g., a striking influx of lymphocytes, especially T cells). In the term pregnant uterus, the expression of all vascular addressins decreased dramatically; only weakly staining maternal vascular segments remained. These segments may define sites of extremely low residual traffic in the term decidua, which contains remarkably few maternal leukocytes overall. Our results suggest that the maternal/fetal interface represents a situation in which leukocyte trafficking is exquisitely regulated to allow entry of specialized leukocyte subsets that may play a fundamental role in immune regulation during pregnancy.  相似文献   

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At the implantation site, the uterine mucosa (decidua) is infiltrated by large numbers of natural killer (NK) cells. These NK cells are in close contact with the invading fetal trophoblast and we have proposed that they might be the effector cells that control the implantation of the allogeneic placenta. Recent characterization of NK cell receptors and their HLA class I ligands has suggested potential mechanisms by which NK cells might interact with trophoblast. However, what happens as a result of this interaction is not clear. The traditional method for investigating NK cell function in vitro is the protection from lysis of target cells by expression of HLA class I antigens. This might not be an accurate reflection of what happens in vivo. Another function of NK cells is the production of cytokines on contact with target cells. This could be an important outcome of the interaction between decidual NK cells and trophoblast. Decidual NK cells are known to produce a variety of cytokines; trophoblast cells express receptors for many of these cytokines, indicating that they can potentially respond. In this way, decidual NK cells have a significant influence on trophoblast behaviour during implantation.  相似文献   

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