| Literature DB >> 33013876 |
Regina Hoo1,2, Annettee Nakimuli1,3, Roser Vento-Tormo1,2.
Abstract
During pregnancy, the placenta forms the anatomical barrier between the mother and developing fetus. Infectious agents can potentially breach the placental barrier resulting in pathogenic transmission from mother to fetus. Innate immune responses, orchestrated by maternal and fetal cells at the decidual-placental interface, are the first line of defense to avoid vertical transmission. Here, we outline the anatomy of the human placenta and uterine lining, the decidua, and discuss the potential capacity of pathogen pattern recognition and other host defense strategies present in the innate immune cells at the placental-decidual interface. We consider major congenital infections that access the placenta from hematogenous or decidual route. Finally, we highlight the challenges in studying human placental responses to pathogens and vertical transmission using current experimental models and identify gaps in knowledge that need to be addressed. We further propose novel experimental strategies to address such limitations.Entities:
Keywords: decidua; innate immunity; trophoblast; uterine-placental interface; vertical transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33013876 PMCID: PMC7511589 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.02070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Possible infection and vertical transmission route at the maternal-fetal interface. Illustration representing the anchoring placenta villi of early pregnancy, with onset of maternal blood circulation bathing the intervillous space. SCT-blood interface represents the SCT barrier exposed to maternal blood and immune cells. EVT-decidua interface represents the interface between EVT and maternal decidua cells. Major cell types of placenta trophoblast and decidua from Vento-Tormo et al. (10) are represented. SCT, syncytiotrophoblast; VCT, villous cytotrophoblast; EVT, extravillous trophoblast; DC, dendritic cell; dNK, decidua Natural killer cells; dM, decidua macrophages; HB, Hofbauer cell; PV, perivascular cells; FcRN, neonatal Fc receptor. Figure is created by BioRender.com.
Vertically transmitted pathogens with clinical evidence from natural human infection.
| Intracellular bacteria | Formation of reticulate body inside host cell allows for rapid replication | Ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth, preterm labor, blinding corneal injury in neonates, neonatal pneumonia | Whole placenta, glandular epithelial cells, unidentified decidual cells | ( | |
| Group B Streptococcus ( | Non-motile, extracellular bacteria | Beta-hemolytic | Neonatal GBS (sepsis and meningitis), preterm birth | Amniotic epithelium, amniotic fluid, chorion, decidua | ( |
| Motile intracellular bacteria | Utilize two bacterial surface proteins (internalin A and B) to invade various non-phagocytic cell types | Spontaneous abortion, stillbirth, preterm labor | Placenta trophoblast | ( | |
| Intracellular bacteria | Able to escape phagosome-mediated lysis in macrophage | Spontaneous abortion, preterm delivery, fetal death | Placenta (unknown cell type) | ( | |
| Motile spirochaete, extracellular bacteria | Able to transverse tight-junction between endothelial cells | Congenital syphilis | Placenta (unknown cell type) | ( | |
| Intracellular parasite | Able to infect and replicate within various host cell types | Congenital toxoplasmosis, stillbirth | Placenta trophoblast | ( | |
| Intracellular and extracellular parasite | Able to propagate in various host cells and escape | Stillbirth, preterm labor | SCT, villous stroma, placenta basal plate | ( | |
| Herpes simplex virus 1, 2 (HSV-1/2) | dsDNA virus | Able to cross through skin lesions and epithelial mucosal cells | Spontaneous abortion, intrauterine growth restriction, preterm labor, neonatal herpes | Decidua | ( |
| Human cytomegalovirus(HCMV) | dsDNA virus | Easily transmitted through bodily fluid | Variable; neonatal neurodevelopmental damage and hearing loss | VCT, decidua, amniotic membrane | ( |
| Rubella | ssRNA virus | Able to enter the lymphatic system from the respiratory tract | Significant birth defects, neonatal deafness, miscarriage | Placenta basal plate and endothelial cells | ( |
| Parvovirus B19 | ssDNA virus | Spread through respiratory droplets | Fetus is usually unaffected, may result in severe fetal anemia | Whole placenta, placenta villi | ( |
| Varicella zoster virus (Chicken pox) | ssDNA virus | Vertical transmission is very rare and only happens in primary infection | Congenital varicella syndrome, intrauterine growth restriction, low birth weight | No evidence, but chronic villitis has been described | ( |
| ZIKA virus (ZIKV) | ssRNA virus | Mosquito borne infection transmitted from blood meal | Congenital fetal anomalies (microcephaly), miscarriage, stillbirth | Whole placenta, amniotic epithelium, VCT, Hofbauer cells, decidual macrophages, decidual fibroblast | ( |
Figure 2Toll-like receptors and potential inflammatory response at the SCT-blood interface. Predominant TLRs found in the human placenta from early and term pregnancies. TLR2 and TLR4 are expressed in human placenta SCT, VCT, and in HB cells. Infiltration of infected maternal blood, infected immune cells, or release of pathogenic determinant such lipopolysaccharide (LPS), peptidoglycan, or parasite materials such as hemozoin or GPI (glycosylphosphatidylinositol) into the IVS will activate TLR-mediated signaling, leading to the production of a wide range of cytokines and chemokines. Severe infection is characterized by massive immune cell infiltration including monocytes and neutrophils from systemic circulation and overproduction of inflammatory cytokines upon TLR activation. This may lead to SCT inflammation and damage. SCT also secretes antimicrobial peptides as innate immune mechanisms. Figure is created by BioRender.com.
Figure 3Toll-like receptors and potential inflammatory response at the decidua. Predominant TLRs found in the human placenta from early and term pregnancies. TLR2 and TLR4 are expressed in EVT. dM and dNK also express a wide range of TLR families, where stimulation of TLR agonists lead to the production of a variety of cytokines and chemokines. Infiltration of infected cells and release of PAMPs in the decidua, which will activate TLR-mediated signaling. Overproduction of inflammatory cytokines at the decidua may lead to local inflammation. Figure is created by BioRender.com.
Figure 4Dotplot representing normalized and log transformed values expression of TLR (TLR1-10), NLR genes (NOD1, NOD2, NLRP1, NLRP3) and IDO1 at steady state in early pregnancy from Vento-Tormo et al. (10). Origin of cell types from placenta (red), decidua (blue), and maternal blood (green) are labeled as differences in font color. Dot size represents the fraction of cells from a certain cluster expressing a gene and color scale represents normalized log transformed expression of the gene in that cluster. dS, decidua stroma; F, fibroblast; MO, monocyte; Endo, endothelial; Epi, epithelial; SCT, syncytiotrophoblast; VCT, villous cytotrophoblast; EVT, extravillous trophoblast; DC, dendritic cell; dNK, decidua Natural killer cells; dM, decidua macrophages; HB, Hofbauer cell; PV, perivascular cells. Figure is created by BioRender.com.