| Literature DB >> 27918564 |
Bihui Huang1, Azure N Faucette1, Michael D Pawlitz1, Bo Pei1, Joshua W Goyert1, Jordan Zheng Zhou1, Nadim G El-Hage1, Jie Deng2, Jason Lin1, Fayi Yao1, Robert S Dewar1, Japnam S Jassal1, Maxwell L Sandberg3, Jing Dai1, Montserrat Cols4, Cong Shen4, Lisa A Polin5, Ronald A Nichols1,6, Theodore B Jones1,6, Martin H Bluth7, Karoline S Puder1, Bernard Gonik1, Nihar R Nayak1, Elizabeth Puscheck1, Wei-Zen Wei5, Andrea Cerutti8,9,10,11, Marco Colonna11,12, Kang Chen1,5,11.
Abstract
Preterm birth (PTB) is a leading cause of neonatal death worldwide. Intrauterine and systemic infection and inflammation cause 30-40% of spontaneous preterm labor (PTL), which precedes PTB. Although antibody production is a major immune defense mechanism against infection, and B cell dysfunction has been implicated in pregnancy complications associated with PTL, the functions of B cells in pregnancy are not well known. We found that choriodecidua of women undergoing spontaneous PTL harbored functionally altered B cell populations. B cell-deficient mice were markedly more susceptible than wild-type (WT) mice to PTL after inflammation, but B cells conferred interleukin (IL)-10-independent protection against PTL. B cell deficiency in mice resulted in a lower uterine level of active progesterone-induced blocking factor 1 (PIBF1), and therapeutic administration of PIBF1 mitigated PTL and uterine inflammation in B cell-deficient mice. B cells are a significant producer of PIBF1 in human choriodecidua and mouse uterus in late gestation. PIBF1 expression by B cells is induced by the mucosal alarmin IL-33 (ref. 9). Human PTL was associated with diminished expression of the α-chain of IL-33 receptor on choriodecidual B cells and a lower level of active PIBF1 in late gestation choriodecidua. These results define a vital regulatory cascade involving IL-33, decidual B cells and PIBF1 in safeguarding term pregnancy and suggest new therapeutic approaches based on IL-33 and PIBF1 to prevent human PTL.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27918564 PMCID: PMC5512431 DOI: 10.1038/nm.4244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440