AI Article Synopsis

  • Exposure to heavy metals like cadmium can negatively impact infant birth weight and other developmental outcomes, potentially through placental dysfunction.
  • The study analyzed the relationship between long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in the placenta and cadmium levels, using data from RNA sequencing to assess their impact on infant birth weight.
  • Findings indicated that specific lncRNAs were associated with both cadmium exposure and variations in birth weight, suggesting that lncRNA expression changes in the placenta could contribute to the reproductive toxicity of cadmium.

Article Abstract

Heavy metal exposures, such as cadmium, can have negative effects on infant birth weight (BW)-among other developmental outcomes-with placental dysfunction potentially playing a role in these effects. In this study, we examined how differential placental expression of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) may be associated with cadmium levels in placenta and whether differences in the expression of those lncRNAs were associated with fetal growth. In the Rhode Island Child Health Study, we used data from Illumina HiSeq whole transcriptome RNA sequencing ( = 199) to examine association between lncRNA expression and measures of infant BW as well as placental cadmium concentrations controlled for appropriate covariates. Of the 1191 lncRNAs sequenced, 46 demonstrated associations ( < 0.05) with BW in models controlling for infant sex, maternal age, BMI, maternal education, and smoking during pregnancy. Furthermore, four of these transcripts were associated with placental cadmium concentrations, with and demonstrating increases in expression associated with increasing cadmium exposure and elevated odds of small for gestational age birth, while and demonstrated reduced expression associated with cadmium, but elevated odds of large for gestational age birth with increasing expression. We identified relationships between lncRNA expression with both placental cadmium concentrations and BW. This study provides evidence that disrupted placental expression of lncRNAs may be a part of cadmium's mechanisms of reproductive toxicity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7211362PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eep/dvaa003DOI Listing

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