Background: Pre-eclampsia remains a dominant cause of maternal and fetal mortality in developed countries. In a previous prospective study we identified a fall in the VEGF-A isoform VEGF-A165b in the plasma of patients in the first trimester to be a predictor of later pre-eclampsia. VEGF-A165b has been shown to have potent cytoprotective properties in many cell types. We therefore tested the hypothesis that VEGF-A165b may be cytoprotective for placental trophoblasts.
Methods: We used an immortalised first trimester trophoblast cell line exposed to chemical toxicity, and physiological (<2% O2) and atmospheric oxygen (21% O2) in the presence or absence of VEGF-A165b, angiogenic VEGF-A165a, a non-specific anti-VEGF-A blocking antibody (bevacizumab), or a specific anti-VEGF-A165b antibody. Cell viability and cytotoxicity were measured by trypan blue and LDH assay respectively.
Results: Under high (21%) levels of oxygen, trophoblast viability was increased, and cytotoxicity reduced by exogenous recombinant VEGF-A165b (p < 0.05, n = 10) or VEGF-A165a. The cytoprotective effect was not seen under lower (<2%) oxygen conditions, where VEGF-A165b was upregulated. However inhibition of VEGF-A with blocking antibodies (bevacizumab or anti-VEGF-A165b) had marked cytotoxic effects under low oxygen conditions presumably through the blockade of autocrine survival pathways.
Conclusions: These results show that when trophoblasts are exposed to lower oxygen tensions (as they are early in the 1st trimester) endogenous VEGF-A165b contributes to their survival through an autocrine pathway. In contrast in high oxygen conditions exogenous VEGF-A isoforms have a greater effect on trophoblast survival.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4143552 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-14-278 | DOI Listing |
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