The extension of mammalian pregnancy required taming inflammation: Independent evolution of extended placentation in the tammar wallaby.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Biological Sciences, School of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The first mammals that gave birth to live young had short pregnancies that involved some inflammation between the mother and the baby.
  • Many marsupials, like kangaroos and wallabies, still keep this short pregnancy style, but their way of handling inflammation is different from other mammals called eutherians.
  • In wallabies, they don't show a strong inflammatory reaction at the start of pregnancy, allowing them to have a longer gestation process compared to other marsupials.

Article Abstract

In the first live-bearing mammals, pregnancy was likely short and ended with a brief period of inflammatory maternal-fetal interaction. This mode of reproduction has been retained in many marsupials. While inflammation is key to successful implantation in eutherians, a key innovation in eutherians is the ability to switch off this inflammation after it has been initiated. This extended period, in which inflammation is suppressed, likely allowed for an extended period of placentation. Extended placentation has evolved independently in one lineage of marsupials, the macropodids (wallabies and kangaroos), with placentation lasting beyond the 2 to 4 d seen in other marsupial taxa, which allows us to investigate the role of inflammation response after attachment in the extension of placentation in mammals. By comparing gene expression changes at attachment in three marsupial species, the tammar wallaby, opossum, and fat-tailed dunnart, we show that inflammatory attachment is an ancestral feature of marsupial implantation. In contrast to eutherians, where attachment-related (quasi-) inflammatory reaction is even involved in epitheliochorial placentation (e.g., pig), this study found no evidence of a distinct attachment-related reaction in wallabies. Instead, only a small number of inflammatory genes are expressed at distinct points of gestation, including before attachment, throughout placentation, and prostaglandins before birth. During parturition, a more distinct inflammatory reaction is detectable, likely involved in precipitating the parturition cascade similar to eutherians. We suggest that in wallaby, extended gestation became possible by avoiding an inflammatory attachment reaction, which is a different strategy than seen in eutherians.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11494332PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2310047121DOI Listing

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