Impact of Metformin Treatment on Human Placental Energy Production and Oxidative Stress.

Front Cell Dev Biol

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, The Rosie Hospital and NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Published: June 2022

Metformin is increasingly prescribed in pregnancy, with beneficial maternal effects. However, it is not known how metformin-treatment impacts metabolism and energy production in the developing feto-placental unit. We assessed the human placental response to metformin using both and treated samples. trophoblasts were derived from placentas collected from non-laboured Caesarean deliveries at term, then treated with metformin (0.01 mM, 0.1 mM or vehicle). Metformin-concentrations were measured using liquid-chromatography mass-spectrometry. Oxygen consumption in cultured-trophoblasts was measured using a Seahorse-XF Mito Stress Test. Markers of oxidative-stress were assayed using qRT-PCR. Metformin-transporter mRNA and protein-levels were determined by quantitative RT-PCR and Western-blotting respectively. Metformin concentrations were also measured in sample trios (maternal plasma/fetal plasma/placental tissue) from pregnancies exposed to metformin on clinical-grounds. Maternal and fetal metformin concentrations were highly correlated over a range of concentrations (R = 0.76, < 0.001; average fetal:maternal ratio 1.5; range 0.8-2.1). Basal respiration in trophoblasts was reduced by metformin treatment (0.01 mM metformin; < 0.05, 0.1 mM metformin; < 0.001). Mitochondrial-dependent ATP production and proton leak were reduced after treatment with metformin ( < 0.001). Oxidative stress markers were significantly reduced in primary-trophoblast-cultures following treatment with metformin. There is a close linear relationship between placental, fetal, and maternal metformin concentrations. Primary-trophoblast cultures exposed to clinically-relevant metformin concentrations have reduced mitochondrial-respiration, mitochondrial-dependent ATP-production, and reduced markers of oxidative-stress. Given the crucial role of placental energy-production in supporting fetal growth and well-being during pregnancy, the implications of these findings are concerning for intrauterine fetal growth and longer-term metabolic programming in metformin-exposed pregnancies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9247405PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.935403DOI Listing

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