| Literature DB >> 32471078 |
Lauren E St-Germain1,2, Barbara Castellana1,2, Jennet Baltayeva1,2, Alexander G Beristain1,2.
Abstract
Inflammation is often equated to the physiological response to injury or infection. Inflammatory responses defined by cytokine storms control cellular mechanisms that can either resolve quickly (i.e., acute inflammation) or remain prolonged and unabated (i.e., chronic inflammation). Perhaps less well-appreciated is the importance of inflammatory processes central to healthy pregnancy, including implantation, early stages of placentation, and parturition. Pregnancy juxtaposed with disease can lead to the perpetuation of aberrant inflammation that likely contributes to or potentiates maternal morbidity and poor fetal outcome. Maternal obesity, a prevalent condition within women of reproductive age, associates with increased risk of developing multiple pregnancy disorders. Importantly, chronic low-grade inflammation is thought to underlie the development of obesity-related obstetric and perinatal complications. While diverse subsets of uterine immune cells play central roles in initiating and maintaining healthy pregnancy, uterine leukocyte dysfunction as a result of maternal obesity may underpin the development of pregnancy disorders. In this review we discuss the current knowledge related to the impact of maternal obesity and obesity-associated inflammation on uterine immune cell function, utero-placental establishment, and pregnancy health.Entities:
Keywords: immune cells; inflammation; maternal obesity; placentation; pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32471078 PMCID: PMC7312391 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21113776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Timeline of human and mouse pregnancies with relative abundance of major decidual leukocytes. Important hallmarks during pregnancy are shown as well as the abundance of decidual Mφ (green), uNKs (blue), regulatory T cells (Tregs) (orange), and total CD3+ T cells (purple) [23,24,25]. Y-axis represents percent of total leukocytes in the decidua. wk, week; E, embryonic day.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of major inflammatory and immune characteristics observed in obesity and pregnancy. Important pro- and anti- inflammatory secretory factors released in the context of obesity and early pregnancy and their overlap during maternal obesity, along with the risks and complications this poses for both the fetus and the mother throughout pregnancy are shown.
Summarizes animal models of inflammation in pregnancy.
| Model | Animal | Experimental Conditions | Results | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Obesity | Mouse | High-fat diet | ∆ gut microbiota composition with ↓ gut barrier integrity | [ |
| Rat | High-fat diet | ↑ trophoblast invasion, MMP9 | [ | |
| Rabbit | Cholesterol enriched diet | ↑ concentration of total-cholesterol and lipoproteins | [ | |
| Hypertension | Rat | Reduced uterine perfusion pressure procedure | ↑ hypertension (mediated through Th cells and AT1) | [ |
| Mouse | Angiotensin II infusion | ↑ T cell composition in aorta, and aortic hypertrophy | [ | |
| Type 1 Diabetes | Mouse | Non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice | ↑ placental weights, IFN-γ, tolerogenic antigen presenting cells | [ |
| Viral infection | Mouse | Allogeneically mated female injected poly I:C | ↑ fetal loss, cytotoxicity of CD27posDX5posCD3neg NK | [ |
| Sterile inflammation | Mouse | Administration of monosodium urate crystals during late gestation | ↑ placental inflammation and FGR | [ |
| Bacterial infection | Mouse | Mice were administered lipopolysaccharide (LPS) intraperitoneally (i.p.) | ↑ uNK, % NK1.1+CD27+ uNK, and NK-mediated fetal demise | [ |
| Rabbit | Transcervical | ↑ preterm delivery, chronic intrauterine, and fetal infection | [ | |
| FGR | Rat | 4-day low-dose LPS injections i.p. | ↓ placental development, vascular remodeling, fetal growth | [ |
| Chronic leptin treatment | ↑ TNF-α expression in placenta | [ | ||
| Canine | Maternal nutrient deprivation | ↓ fetal weight, maternal blood glucose, ketone bodies, and FFA | [ | |
| Preterm labor | Rat | Intrauterine injury induced by transient hypoxia-ischemia and LPS injection | ↑ acute and subacute placental injury | [ |
| i.p. injection of LPS | ↓ birth weights (alleviated with erythromycin treatment) | [ | ||
| Mouse | i.p. injection of LPS | ↑ TLR-4-mediated preterm birth with no neonatal mortality | [ | |
| 3 injections of rhIL-1 | Parturition occurred within 24 h | [ | ||
| Lipoteichoic acid i.p. | ↑ incidence of preterm delivery | [ | ||
| Rabbit | LPS administered via catheter to uteri five times at 1-h intervals | ↑ uterine contractions | [ | |
| Endocervical | ↑ Inflammation in uterus, placenta, and fetal lung | [ | ||
| Sheep | Intravenous LPS | ↑ fetal hypoxemia | [ | |
| Monkey | ↑ spontaneous parturition, steroid hormones | [ | ||
| Genetic models of inflammation | Mouse | IFN-γ-/- or IFN-γRα−/− mated with BALB/c male | ↑ uNK, fluid, cellularity, and necrosis in decidua | [ |
| RAG-2-/-yc-/- or IL-15-/- pregnant females received bone marrow from IL-15-/- or C57/BL6 pregnant females | RAG-2-/-yc-/- + bone marrow from IL-15-/- | [ | ||
| ↓ macrophages and NKs in mesometrial stroma | [ | |||
| D8 male father (containing H2-Dd MHC allele) | ↓ NK function, uterine arterial remodeling, fetal growth | [ | ||
| BALB/cx C57/BL6 (FxM) compared to C57/BL6xBALB/c | ↑ decidual artery diameters | [ |
↑ indicates increase; ↓ indicates decrease in frequency, expression, and amount.
Figure 3Proposed model of the effects of obesity on the intrauterine environment. Obesity-linked inflammation may affect uterine immune cell biology by: (a) disrupting the crosstalk between trophoblasts and uterine leukocytes resulting in impaired trophoblast invasion and artery remodeling [129,185,211,224,243,244,245], and (b) creating imbalances in immunoregulatory and pro-inflammatory uterine leukocytes that in turn potentiate maternal-fetal intolerance [60,211,246,247]. When inflammation is present in the intrauterine environment, homeostasis is disrupted leading to alterations in the frequencies and functions of important immunoregulatory cell populations that in turn impact spiral artery remodeling and trophoblast functions (invasion) and survival. Dashed lines indicate inefficient or inadequate induction/activation (depicted in green) or blockage/inhibition (depicted in red). Abbreviations: Teff, T effector cell; T naïve, naïve T cell; SCT, syncytiotrophoblast; CTB, villous cytotrophoblast; column-CTB, anchoring column cytotrophoblast. This figure was created using BioRender.com.