| Literature DB >> 34196872 |
Lissette Sanchez-Aranguren1, Sarah Nadeem2.
Abstract
Pregnancy is a challenging physiological process that involves maternal adaptations to the increasing energetics demands imposed by the growing conceptus. Failure to adapt to these requirements may result in serious health complications for the mother and the baby. The mitochondria are biosynthetic and energy-producing organelles supporting the augmented energetic demands of pregnancy. Evidence suggests that placental mitochondria display a dynamic phenotype through gestation. At early stages of pregnancy placental mitochondria are mainly responsible for the generation of metabolic intermediates and reactive oxygen species (ROS), while at later stages of gestation, the placental mitochondria exhibit high rates of oxygen consumption. This review describes the metabolic fingerprint of the placental mitochondria at different stages of pregnancy and summarises key signs of mitochondrial dysfunction in pathological pregnancy conditions, including preeclampsia, gestational diabetes and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). So far, the effects of placental-driven metabolic changes governing the metabolic adaptations occurring in different maternal tissues in both, healthy and pathological pregnancies, remain to be uncovered. Understanding the function and molecular aspects of the adaptations occurring in placental and maternal tissue's mitochondria will unveil potential targets for further therapeutic exploration that could address pregnancy-related disorders. Targeting mitochondrial metabolism is an emerging approach for regulating mitochondrial bioenergetics. This review will also describe the potential therapeutic use of compounds with a recognised effect on mitochondria, for the management of preeclampsia.Entities:
Keywords: Mitochondria; Mitochondrial dysfunction; Mitochondrial-targeted drugs; Pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34196872 PMCID: PMC8473347 DOI: 10.1007/s11010-021-04215-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Biochem ISSN: 0300-8177 Impact factor: 3.396
Fig. 1Schematic overview of mitochondrial bioenergetics of the electron transport chain and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. H+, hydrogen; sqr, sulfide quinone oxidoreductase; Q, coenzyme Q; Cyt c, cytochrome c; e−, electron
Fig. 2Proposed mechanisms of cellular bioenergetics in cytotrophoblasts at early and late stages of pregnancy. Cat, catalase; MnSOD, manganese superoxide dismutase
Drugs with recognised effect on mitochondrial function used in models of preeclampsia established in vitro, in vivo and clinical trials
| Study approach | Drug | Treatment and dose | Outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment | |||||
| HUVEC | Culture with (a) 3% plasma (b) 200 µM hydrogen peroxide | Mito-Tempo | Pre-treatment (2 h) with 5 µM | -Reduced mtROS generation -Reduced hydrogen peroxide induced-cell death | [ |
| HUVEC | Culture with 10% serum from RUPP rats treated with mito-Tempo and mitoQ | Mito-Tempo MitoQ | Mito-Tempo: 1 mg/kg per day via osmotic pumps MitoQ: 500 µM via oral gavage | -Reduced cellular mtROS production | [ |
| Human primary cytotrophoblasts | Culture in low oxygen conditions (5% O2) | AP39 | Pre-treatment (30 min) with 10, 25 and 50 µM | -Reduced mtROS generation -Abrogation of sFlt-1 production | [ |
| HUVEC, primary villous CT and placental villous explants | Metformin | 1, 2 and 5 mM | -Reduction of sFlt-1 and soluble endoglin mRNA levels and protein expression | [ | |
| HUVEC, primary villous CT and placental villous explants | Metformin + sulfasalazine | 200 μM metformin or 200 μM sulfasalazine alone or in combination | -Reduction in the secretion of sFlt-1 and soluble endoglin | [ | |
| HUVEC, primary villous CT and placental villous explants | Metformin + esomeprazole | 1000 μM metformin or 25 μM esomeprazole alone or in combination | -Reduction in the secretion of sFlt-1 and soluble endoglin | [ | |
| First trimester and term placenta | Culture with monoclonal antiphospholipid antibodies | MitoQ | 0.1, 1 and 10 μM | -Reduction of ROS production of explants | [ |
| Sprague Dawley rats | RUPP | Mito-Tempo MitoQ | MitoTempo: 1 mg/kg per day via osmotic pumps MitoQ: 500 µM via oral gavage | -Reduced maternal blood pressure -Improved pup and placental weight | [ |
| Pregnant Institute of Cancer (ICR) Research mice | RUPP | Mito Q | 100 μM/Kg/day via oral gavage | -Administration at late stage of pregnancy (E13.5–17.5) resulted in alleviated preeclampsia-like signs and abrogation of oxidative stress in placenta -Administration in early stages (E7.5–11.5) elevated blood pressure, foetal growth restriction and proteinuria | [ |
| Wistar rats | 200 mg/kg/day L-NAME subcutaneous injection (5 days) | Coenzyme Q10 | 60 mg/kg/day via gavage | -Reduction of Systemic blood pressure and proteinuria on day 21 of gestation -Increased pup size and weight | [ |
| Clinical trials | |||||
| NCT00300937 | Participants: 235 women 118 women: Received coenzyme Q10 117 women: Received placebo | Coenzyme Q10 | 200 mg daily from 20th weeks of gestation until delivery | -Rate of preeclampsia in the coenzyme Q10 group (14.4%) vs placebo group (25.6%) | [ |
| PACTR201608001752102 | Recruiting | Metformin | [ | ||
| NCT03717701 | Recruiting | Metformin + esomeprazole | |||
HUVEC human umbilical vein endothelial cells; CT cytotrophoblasts; mtROS mitochondrial reactive oxygen species; sFlt-1 soluble Flt-1; O oxygen; ROS reactive oxygen species, L-NAME Nw-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester; E gestation from embryonic day
Fig. 3Structure of mitochondrial-targeted AP39, Mito-Tempo and Mito-Q. TPP+, triphenylphosphonium