| Literature DB >> 30382946 |
Markus Abeln1, Iris Albers1, Ulrike Peters-Bernard1, Kerstin Flächsig-Schulz1, Elina Kats1, Andreas Kispert2, Stephen Tomlinson3, Rita Gerardy-Schahn1, Anja Münster-Kühnel1, Birgit Weinhold1.
Abstract
The negatively charged sugar sialic acid (Sia) occupies the outermost position in the bulk of cell surface glycans. Lack of sialylated glycans due to genetic ablation of the Sia-activating enzyme CMP-sialic acid synthase (CMAS) resulted in embryonic lethality around day 9.5 post coitum (E9.5) in mice. Developmental failure was caused by complement activation on trophoblasts in Cmas-/- implants and was accompanied by infiltration of maternal neutrophils at the fetal-maternal interface, intrauterine growth restriction, impaired placental development, and a thickened Reichert's membrane. This phenotype, which shared features with complement receptor 1-related protein Y (Crry) depletion, was rescued in E8.5 Cmas-/- mice upon injection of cobra venom factor, resulting in exhaustion of the maternal complement component C3. Here we show that Sia is dispensable for early development of the embryo proper but pivotal for fetal-maternal immune homeostasis during pregnancy, i.e., for protecting the allograft implant against attack by the maternal innate immune system. Finally, embryos devoid of cell surface sialylation suffered from malnutrition due to inadequate placentation as a secondary effect.Entities:
Keywords: Complement; Embryonic development; Glycobiology; Immunology; Reproductive Biology
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30382946 PMCID: PMC6307973 DOI: 10.1172/JCI99945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808