| Literature DB >> 32316284 |
Rafał Sibiak1, Maurycy Jankowski2, Paweł Gutaj1, Paul Mozdziak3, Bartosz Kempisty2,4,5,6, Ewa Wender-Ożegowska1.
Abstract
Placental lactogen (PL) is a peptide hormone secreted throughout pregnancy by both animal and human specialized endocrine cells. PL plays an important role in the regulation of insulin secretion in pancreatic β-cells, stimulating their proliferation and promoting the expression of anti-apoptotic proteins. Cases of pregnancy affected by metabolic conditions, including obesity and diabetes, are related to alterations in the PL secretion pattern. Whereas obesity is most often associated with lower PL serum concentrations, diabetes results in increased PL blood levels. Disruptions in PL secretion are thought to be associated with an increased prevalence of gestational complications, such as placental dysfunction, diabetic retinopathy, and abnormalities in fetal growth. PL is believed to be positively correlated with birth weight. The impaired regulation of PL secretion could contribute to an increased incidence of both growth retardation and fetal macrosomia. Moreover, the dysregulation of PL production during the intrauterine period could affect the metabolic status in adulthood. PL concentration measurement could be useful in the prediction of fetal macrosomia in women with normal oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) results or in evaluating the risk of fetal growth restriction, but its application in standard clinical practice seems to be limited in the era of ultrasonography.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; fetal growth; obesity; placental lactogen
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316284 PMCID: PMC7230810 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9041142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1The mechanisms of the biological activity of placental lactogen (PL) in pancreatic β-cells. PL binds to the prolactin receptor (PRL Receptor) to promote increased insulin secretion through the stimulation of pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1 (PDX1) expression. PL also activates a range of intracellular pathways (the Janus-activated-kinase-2/signal transducer and activator of transcription-5 (JAK2/STAT5) pathway and the phosphorylation of protein kinase B (AKT)) to protect β-cells from apoptotic death. Independently from the mechanisms mentioned above, PL contributes to increased expression of the BCL-XL anti-apoptotic protein [43,44,45,46]. Created with BioRender.
Placental lactogen throughout diabetic pregnancy.
| Study Title [Reference] | Number of Participants | Clinical Characteristics | Placental Lactogen Measurement, Method | Main Findings | First Author (Year of Study) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placental peptides metabolism and maternal factors as predictors of risk of gestational diabetes in pregnant women. A case-control study. [ | 200 | 150 healthy participants—12 developed GDM, 50 controls with T1D | I and II trimester of pregnancy, Sandwich Elisa in maternal serum | I trimester: PL levels significantly higher in patients with T1D, II trimester: No difference in PL between 12 patients who developed GDM and 138 healthy controls, PL levels were significantly higher in patients with T1D compared with those with GDM | Ngala et al. (2017) |
| Maternal serum and amniotic fluid levels of human placental lactogen in gestational diabetes. [ | 46 | 16 patients with GDM, 30 healthy controls | Between the 37th and 39th weeks of gestation, radioimmunoassay in maternal serum and amniotic fluid | No difference in PL serum levels, significantly higher concentrations of amniotic fluid PL in patients with diabetes | Lolis et al. (1978) |
| Evaluation of circulating determinants of beta-cell function in women with and without gestational diabetes. [ | 395 | 105 patients with GDM, 290 healthy controls | PL was measured “in the late second trimester”, ELISA #20-HPLHU-E01 (Alpco) in maternal serum | No differences in PL levels between diabetic and non-patients with diabetes | Retnakaran et al. (2016) |
| Serial determinations of human placental lactogen in the management of diabetic pregnancy. [ | 138 | 98 patients with diabetes—White classes: | PL concentrations were determined at the 27–29, 30–31, 32–34, and 35–37 weeks of gestation. Radioimmunoassay in maternal serum | PL concentrations after 32 weeks’ gestation were significantly higher in patients with diabetes compared with controls. No differences in PL levels between various White classes | Soler et al. (1975) |
| Placental Lactogen Levels in Diabetic Pregnancy. [ | 34 | “patients with abnormal glucose tolerance tests during pregnancy”, 29 insulin-dependent | A total of 219 measurements in 34 patients. At each visit from 20 weeks’ gestation, and weekly from 32 weeks until delivery. Radioimmunoassay in maternal serum | PL serum levels higher than those in a normal population | Ursell et al. (1973) |
| Mitochondrial function and glucose metabolism in the placenta with gestational diabetes mellitus: Role of miR-143. [ | 18 | 6 patients with A1GDM, 6 patients with A2GDM, 6 patients that were healthy controls | Placental tissue collected at term after C-section, Sandwich Elisa (Genway)—in placental homogenate | PL significantly increased in A2GDM patients compared with those with A1GDM and controls | Muralimanoharan et al. (2016) |
| Placental lactogen, progesterone, total estriol and prolactin plasma levels in pregnant women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. [ | 25 | 15 insulin-dependent patients (White’s class B–C), 10 healthy controls | PL measured every 4 weeks from the 12th to 36th week of gestation. Radioimmunoassay in maternal serum (Biodata kit) | PL significantly lower in patients with diabetes at the 12th, 20th, 24th, 32nd, and 36th weeks of gestation | Botta et al. (1984) |
Abbreviations: A1GDM—gestational diabetes controlled by diet and exercise, A2GDM—gestational diabetes treated with medication, GDM—gestational diabetes mellitus, PL—placental lactogen, and T1D—type 1 diabetes.
Placental lactogen in the regulation of fetal growth.
| Study Title [Reference] | Clinical Characteristics | Analyzed Parameters | Main Findings | First Author (Year of Study) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Somatomedin in newborns and the relationship to human chorionic somatotropin and fetal growth. [ | 22 pregnant patients | PL levels in the maternal serum during the III trimester of pregnancy and cord blood at term | No correlation between PL levels, and birth weight and length | Kastrup et al. (1978) |
| Relationships of infant birth size to maternal lipoproteins, apoproteins, fuels, hormones, clinical chemistries, and body weight at 36 weeks gestation. [ | 273 patients in singelton pregnancies | PL concentrations in maternal blood measured at 36 weeks of gestation | Positive correlation between maternal blood PL concentrations, birth weight, and birth length | Knopp et al. (1985) |
| Relationship of maternal and fetal levels of human placental lactogen to the weight and sex of the fetus. [ | 101 pregnant patients | PL levels in the maternal serum at 38–42 weeks of gestation, cord artery, and cord vein collected at term | Positive correlation between maternal serum PL and birth weight, with no correlation in the case of umbilical cord blood | Houghton et al. (1984) |
| Differential expression profile of Growth Hormone/Chorionic Somatomammotropin genes in placenta of small- and large-for-gestational-age newborns. [ | 72 patients in uncomplicated singelton pregnancies | CSH1 and CSH2 gene mRNA in term placental tissue | CSH1 and CSH2 gene transcript levels were significantly higher in LGA newborns compared with SGA and AGA neonates | Männik et al. (2010) |
| Macrosomia in Pregnancy Complicated by Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus. [ | 83 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes | PL maternal serum concentrations during the III trimester of pregnancy | Mothers of macrosomic infants have significantly higher concentrations of serum PL | Small et al. (1987) |
| Maternal serum concentrations of human placental lactogen, estradiol and pregnancy specific β1-glycoprotein and fetal growth retardation. [ | 200 multiparous women with fetal growth retardation risk factors | PL maternal serum levels measured at a mean of 18 weeks’ gestational age | Higher maternal levels of PL are associated with a decreased prevalence of fetal growth retardation | Gardner (1997) |
| Prediction of fetal growth based on maternal serum concentrations of human chorionic gonadotropin, human placental lactogen and estriol. [ | 214 patients, mothers of 102 SGA infants and 112 non-SGA neonates | PL levels in maternal serum were measured serially at 17, 25, 33, and 37 weeks of gestation | Significant differences in PL measured at 17, 33, and 37 weeks of pregnancy in mothers of SGA and non-SGA infants | Markestad et al. (1997) |
| Human placental lactogen and pregnancy-associated plasma protein A in first trimester and subsequent fetal growth. [ | 93 patients with uncomplicated singelton pregnancies | Maternal PL serum concentrations measured between the 8th and 14th week of pregnancy | PL is negatively correlated with gestational age at delivery | Pedersen et al. (1995) |
Abbreviations: AGA—appropriate for gestational age, CSH1—chorionic somatomammotropin 1, CSH2—chorionic somatomammotropin 2, GDM—gestational diabetes mellitus, LGA—large for gestational age, PL—placental lactogen, and SGA—small for gestational age.
Figure 2The influence of increased blood placental lactogen (PL) levels on tissues of the developing fetus. Elevated PL concentrations throughout pregnancy are correlated with an increased secretion of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and insulin-like growth factor-2 (IGF-2), which directly corresponds to an increased fetal weight [95]. Created with BioRender.
Figure 3The summary of clinical conditions associated with elevated and decreased placental lactogen blood levels [49,50,51,61,65,66,67,86,87,88,89,90,91,92,99]. Created with BioRender.