AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers studied placental gene expression in obese (BMI 35+) versus lean (BMI 18.5-25) women using advanced sequencing techniques, uncovering that maternal obesity increases the expression of hypoxia response genes in the placenta.
  • * Findings indicate that hypoxia in extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs) is significantly correlated with neurodevelopmental impairments in offspring, suggesting that managing hypoxia could mitigate some negative effects of maternal obesity on child development.

Article Abstract

One third of women in the United States are affected by obesity during pregnancy. Maternal obesity (MO) is associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental and metabolic disorders in the offspring. The placenta, located at the maternal-fetal interface, is a key organ determining fetal development and likely contributes to programming of long-term offspring health. We profiled the term placental transcriptome in humans (pre-pregnancy BMI 35+ [MO condition] or 18.5-25 [lean condition]) using single-nucleus RNA-seq to compare expression profiles in MO versus lean conditions, and to reveal potential mechanisms underlying offspring disease risk. We recovered 62,864 nuclei of high quality from 10 samples each from the maternal-facing and fetal-facing sides of the placenta. On both sides in several cell types, MO was associated with upregulation of hypoxia response genes. On the maternal-facing side only, hypoxia gene expression was associated with offspring neurodevelopmental measures, in Gen3G, an independent pregnancy cohort with bulk placental tissue RNA-seq. We leveraged Gen3G to determine genes that correlated with impaired neurodevelopment and found these genes to be most highly expressed in extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs). EVTs further showed the strongest correlation between neurodevelopment impairment gene scores (NDIGSs) and the hypoxia gene score. We reanalyzed gene expression of cultured EVTs, and found increased NDIGSs associated with exposure to hypoxia. Among EVTs, accounting for the hypoxia gene score attenuated 44% of the association between BMI and NDIGSs. These data suggest that hypoxia in EVTs may be a key process in the neurodevelopmental programming of fetal exposure to MO.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11257614PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.10.602900DOI Listing

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