| Literature DB >> 25758223 |
Katharina Walentin1, Christian Hinze1, Max Werth2, Nadine Haase3, Saaket Varma4, Robert Morell5, Annekatrin Aue1, Elisabeth Pötschke6, David Warburton4, Andong Qiu7, Jonathan Barasch7, Bettina Purfürst6, Christoph Dieterich8, Elena Popova6, Michael Bader6, Ralf Dechend3, Anne Cathrine Staff9, Zeliha Yesim Yurtdas10, Ergin Kilic11, Kai M Schmidt-Ott12.
Abstract
Healthy placental development is essential for reproductive success; failure of the feto-maternal interface results in pre-eclampsia and intrauterine growth retardation. We found that grainyhead-like 2 (GRHL2), a CP2-type transcription factor, is highly expressed in chorionic trophoblast cells, including basal chorionic trophoblast (BCT) cells located at the chorioallantoic interface in murine placentas. Placentas from Grhl2-deficient mouse embryos displayed defects in BCT cell polarity and basement membrane integrity at the chorioallantoic interface, as well as a severe disruption of labyrinth branching morphogenesis. Selective Grhl2 inactivation only in epiblast-derived cells rescued all placental defects but phenocopied intraembryonic defects observed in global Grhl2 deficiency, implying the importance of Grhl2 activity in trophectoderm-derived cells. ChIP-seq identified 5282 GRHL2 binding sites in placental tissue. By integrating these data with placental gene expression profiles, we identified direct and indirect Grhl2 targets and found a marked enrichment of GRHL2 binding adjacent to genes downregulated in Grhl2(-/-) placentas, which encoded known regulators of placental development and epithelial morphogenesis. These genes included that encoding the serine protease inhibitor Kunitz type 1 (Spint1), which regulates BCT cell integrity and labyrinth formation. In human placenta, we found that human orthologs of murine GRHL2 and its targets displayed co-regulation and were expressed in trophoblast cells in a similar domain as in mouse placenta. Our data indicate that a conserved Grhl2-coordinated gene network controls trophoblast branching morphogenesis, thereby facilitating development of the site of feto-maternal exchange. This might have implications for syndromes related to placental dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Basement membrane defects; Epithelial differentiation; Epithelial morphogenesis; Placenta defects; Spint1
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25758223 PMCID: PMC6517833 DOI: 10.1242/dev.113829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Development ISSN: 0950-1991 Impact factor: 6.868