| Literature DB >> 27590522 |
Sarwat I Gilani1,2, Tracey L Weissgerber1, Vesna D Garovic1, Muthuvel Jayachandran3,4.
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a hypertensive pregnancy disorder characterized by development of hypertension and proteinuria after 20 weeks of gestation that remains a leading cause of maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. While preeclampsia is believed to result from complex interactions between maternal and placental factors, the proximate pathophysiology of this syndrome remains elusive. Cell-to-cell communication is a critical signaling mechanism for feto-placental development in normal pregnancies. One mechanism of cellular communication relates to activated cell-derived sealed membrane vesicles called extracellular vesicles (EVs). The concentrations and contents of EVs in biological fluids depend upon their cells of origin and the stimuli which trigger their production. Research on EVs in preeclampsia has focused on EVs derived from the maternal vasculature (endothelium, vascular smooth muscle) and blood (erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets), as well as placental syncytiotrophoblasts. Changes in the concentrations and contents of these EVs may contribute to the pathophysiology of preeclampsia by accentuating the pro-inflammatory and pro-coagulatory states of pregnancy. This review focuses on possible interactions among placental- and maternal-derived EVs and their contents in the initiation and progression of the pathogenesis of preeclampsia. Understanding the contributions of EVs in the pathogenesis of preeclampsia may facilitate their use as diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-cell communication; Exosomes; Hypertensive pregnancy disorder; Microvesicles; Vesicles
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27590522 PMCID: PMC5010622 DOI: 10.1007/s11906-016-0678-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Hypertens Rep ISSN: 1522-6417 Impact factor: 5.369
Fig. 1Role of EVs in pathogenesis of preeclampsia. Maternal risk factors and placental abnormalities cause systemic maternal cell activation resulting in release of EVs. Endothelial-, leukocyte-, and platelet-derived EVs give rise to vascular dysfunction, immune modulation, and increased thrombotic propensity. These processes collectively contribute to progression of pathogenesis of preeclampsia
Preeclampsia-associated maternal risk factors
| Pre-pregnancy maternal characteristics | Relative risk | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Obesity | 2.47 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Pre-gestational diabetes mellitus | 3.56 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Hypertension | 1.38–2.37 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Autoimmune diseases | ||
| • Systemic lupus erythematosus | – | |
| • Antiphospholipid syndrome | 9.72 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Sickle cell anemia | 2.43 | Oteng-Ntim et al. [ |
| Nulliparity | 2.91 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Preeclampsia in prior pregnancy | 7.19 | Duckitt et al. [ |
| Family history of preeclampsia | 2.90 | Duckitt et al. [ |
EVs in non-pregnant women with preeclampsia-associated risk factors compared to non-pregnant women without preeclampsia-associated risk factors
| Risk factor | Extracellular vesicles | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Obesity | Endothelial-derived | ↑ | Stephanian et al. [ |
| Platelet-derived | ↑ | Stephanian et al. [ | |
| Diabetes mellitus | Endothelium-derived | ↑ | Sabatier et al. [ |
| ↑ | Tramontano et al. [ | ||
| Leukocyte-derived | No difference | Zhang et al. [ | |
| Platelet-derived | ↑ | Zhang et al. [ | |
| ↑ | Strano et al. [ | ||
| Hypertension | Endothelium-derived | ↑ | Preston et al. [ |
| Platelet-derived | ↑ | Preston et al. [ | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | Leukocyte-derived | ↑ | Lacroix et al. [ |
| ↓ | Neilson et al. [ | ||
| Endothelium-derived | ↑ | Lacroix et al. [ | |
| No difference | Neilson et al. [ | ||
| Platelet-derived | ↑ | Stephanian et al. [ | |
| Antiphospholipid syndrome | Endothelium-derived | ↑ | Dignat-George et al. [ |
| Leukocyte-derived | ↑ | Dignat-George et al. [ | |
| Sickle cell anemia | Platelet-derived | ↑ | Wun et al. [ |
Comparison of EVs between preeclampsia and normotensive pregnancy
| Parameter | Preeclampsia | Normotensive pregnancy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total EVs | Increased/no change/decreased | Present | Tesse et al. [ |
| Syncytiotrophoblast-derived EVs (early-onset PE) | Increased/no significant change | Present | Knight et al. [ |
| Syncytiotrophoblast-derived EVs (late-onset PE)/severe | No change/no change | Present | Goswami et al. [ |
| Endothelial cell-derived EVs | Increased/no change | Present | Marques et al. [ |
| Platelet-derived EVs | Decreased | Present | Marques et al. [ |
| Leukocyte-derived EVs | Increased | Present | Mikhailova et al. [ |
| • Granulocyte-derived EVs | Increased | Present | Lok et al. [ |
| • Monocyte-derived EVs | Increased | Present | Lok et al. [ |
| • Lymphocyte-derived EVs | Decreased | Present | Lok et al. [ |
| • T cell-derived EVs | Increased | Negligible | vanWijk et al.[ |
| • T helper cell-derived EVs | Increased | Negligible | Lok et al. [ |
| Erythrocyte-derived EVs | Increased | Present | Lok et al. [ |