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result(s) for
"Gauster, Martin"
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Early human trophoblast development: from morphology to function
2022
Human pregnancy depends on the proper development of the embryo prior to implantation and the implantation of the embryo into the uterine wall. During the pre-implantation phase, formation of the morula is followed by internalization of blastomeres that differentiate into the pluripotent inner cell mass lineage, while the cells on the surface undergo polarization and differentiate into the trophectoderm of the blastocyst. The trophectoderm mediates apposition and adhesion of the blastocyst to the uterine epithelium. These processes lead to a stable contact between embryonic and maternal tissues, resulting in the formation of a new organ, the placenta. During implantation, the trophectoderm cells start to differentiate and form the basis for multiple specialized trophoblast subpopulations, all of which fulfilling specific key functions in placentation. They either differentiate into polar cells serving typical epithelial functions, or into apolar invasive cells that adapt the uterine wall to progressing pregnancy. The composition of these trophoblast subpopulations is crucial for human placenta development and alterations are suggested to result in placenta-associated pregnancy pathologies. This review article focuses on what is known about very early processes in human reproduction and emphasizes on morphological and functional aspects of early trophoblast differentiation and subpopulations.
Journal Article
Placental Endocrine Activity: Adaptation and Disruption of Maternal Glucose Metabolism in Pregnancy and the Influence of Fetal Sex
by
Hiden, Ursula
,
Jantscher-Krenn, Evelyn
,
Stern, Christina
in
Adaptation
,
Adaptation, Physiological
,
Diabetes
2021
The placenta is an endocrine fetal organ, which secretes a plethora of steroid- and proteo-hormones, metabolic proteins, growth factors, and cytokines in order to adapt maternal physiology to pregnancy. Central to the growth of the fetus is the supply with nutrients, foremost with glucose. Therefore, during pregnancy, maternal insulin resistance arises, which elevates maternal blood glucose levels, and consequently ensures an adequate glucose supply for the developing fetus. At the same time, maternal β-cell mass and function increase to compensate for the higher insulin demand. These adaptations are also regulated by the endocrine function of the placenta. Excessive insulin resistance or the inability to increase insulin production accordingly disrupts physiological modulation of pregnancy mediated glucose metabolism and may cause maternal gestational diabetes (GDM). A growing body of evidence suggests that this adaptation of maternal glucose metabolism differs between pregnancies carrying a girl vs. pregnancies carrying a boy. Moreover, the risk of developing GDM differs depending on the sex of the fetus. Sex differences in placenta derived hormones and bioactive proteins, which adapt and modulate maternal glucose metabolism, are likely to contribute to this sexual dimorphism. This review provides an overview on the adaptation and maladaptation of maternal glucose metabolism by placenta-derived factors, and highlights sex differences in this regulatory network.
Journal Article
Maternal Platelets—Friend or Foe of the Human Placenta?
by
Guettler, Jacqueline
,
Gauster, Martin
,
Moser, Gerit
in
Blood platelets
,
Blood Platelets - metabolism
,
Blood Platelets - physiology
2019
Human pregnancy relies on hemochorial placentation, including implantation of the blastocyst and deep invasion of fetal trophoblast cells into maternal uterine blood vessels, enabling direct contact of maternal blood with placental villi. Hemochorial placentation requires fast and reliable hemostasis to guarantee survival of the mother, but also for the neonates. During human pregnancy, maternal platelet count decreases gradually from first, to second, and third trimester. In addition to hemodilution, accelerated platelet sequestration and consumption in the placental circulation may contribute to a decline of platelet count throughout gestation. Local stasis, turbulences, or damage of the syncytiotrophoblast layer can activate maternal platelets within the placental intervillous space and result in formation of fibrin-type fibrinoid. Perivillous fibrinoid is a regular constituent of the normal placenta which is considered to be an important regulator of intervillous hemodynamics, as well as having a role in shaping the developing villous trees. However, exaggerated activation of platelets at the maternal-fetal interface can provoke inflammasome activation in the placental trophoblast, and enhance formation of circulating platelet-monocyte aggregates, resulting in sterile inflammation of the placenta and a systemic inflammatory response in the mother. Hence, the degree of activation determines whether maternal platelets are a friend or foe of the human placenta. Exaggerated activation of maternal platelets can either directly cause or propagate the disease process in placenta-associated pregnancy pathologies, such as preeclampsia.
Journal Article
Extravillous trophoblasts invade more than uterine arteries: evidence for the invasion of uterine veins
by
Weiss, Gregor
,
Huppertz, Berthold
,
Sundl, Monika
in
Biochemistry
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2017
During the first trimester of pregnancy, extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs) invade into the decidual interstitium to the first third of the myometrium, thereby anchoring the placenta to the uterus. They also follow the endovascular and endoglandular route of invasion; plug, line and remodel spiral arteries, thus being responsible for the establishment of hemotrophic nutrition with the beginning of the second trimester and invade and open uterine glands toward the intervillous space for a histiotrophic nutrition during the first trimester. The aim of this study was to provide proof that uterine veins are invaded by EVTs similar to uterine arteries and glands in first trimester of pregnancy. Therefore, serial sections from in situ first trimester placenta were immuno-single- and immuno-double-stained to distinguish in a first step between arteries and veins and secondly between invaded and non-invaded vessels. Subsequently, invasion of EVTs into uterine vessels was quantified. Our data show that uterine veins are significantly more invaded by EVTs than uterine arteries (29.2 ± 15.7 %) during early pregnancy. Counted vessel cross sections revealed significantly higher EVT invasion into veins (59.5 ± 7.9 %) compared to arteries (29.2 ± 15.7 %). In the lumen of veins, single EVTs were repeatedly found, beside detached glandular epithelial cells or syncytial fragments. This study allows the expansion of our hitherto postulated concept of EVT invasion during first trimester of pregnancy. We suggest that invasion of EVTs into uterine veins is responsible the draining of waste and blood plasma from the intervillous space during the first trimester of pregnancy.
Journal Article
ERV3-MLT1 provides cis-regulatory elements for human placental functioning and are commonly dysregulated in human-specific preeclampsia
by
Gellhaus, Alexandra
,
Hallett, Eve
,
Izsvák, Zsuzsanna
in
ancestry
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
2025
Background
Owing to their transcription factor binding sites, endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) can act as cis-regulatory-elements (CREs). By invading genomes in waves, ERVs offer a substrate for lineage-specific adaptations but also, when dysregulated, for lineage-specific disorders. Their role as CREs in rapid placental evolution, and in the human-specific placental disorder preeclampsia, may thus provide a paradigmatic exemplar. Here then we systematically identify ERV-derived CREs controlling human placental gene expression with dysregulation in preeclampsia.
Results
We identify 87 ERV-derived CREs located upstream of genes expressed in the placenta. A subset of nine, all belonging to the ERV3-MLT1/2 families and dating to the mouse–human common ancestor, are consistently dysregulated in trophoblasts from preeclampsia samples. Of the nine ERV3-MLT1-linked genes dysregulated in preeclampsia, five are novel candidates, while four were previously associated with preeclampsia, though their ERV-based regulation was not recognized. Focusing on EPS8L1, we predict enhancer activity of upstream MLT1(G1) and validate using reporter assay and genome editing. This vertebrate-specific gene is expressed in progenitor cytotrophoblasts and syncytiotrophoblasts and is overexpressed in preeclampsia, correlating with preeclampsia biomarkers and is not elevated in related pregnancy disorders. A soluble form of EPS8L1 is detectable in maternal plasma as early as between 24 weeks of gestation. EPS8L1 knockout in trophoblast in vitro is lethal, and its overexpression alters trophoblast behaviors characteristic of preeclampsia.
Conclusions
We conclude that ERV3-MLT1functions as a trophoblast-specific CRE for several human genes and may be dysregulated in preeclampsia. As EPS8L1 has a form in maternal circulation, it may have utility in diagnostics.
Journal Article
Endogenous retroviral elements LTR8B and MER65 rewire PSG9 regulation to control trophoblast syncytialization and pre-eclampsia risk
by
Feschotte, Cedric
,
Zadora, Julianna
,
Qu, Yuliang
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
,
Bioinformatics
2026
Background
Understanding the causes of the exceptional rate of evolution of the mammalian placenta is likely to aid the understanding of placental development and the etiology of the human-specific pregnancy disorder pre-eclampsia (PE). As retroelements are often lineage-specific and known to be co-opted for placental function, here we consider the binding of the transcription factors GATA3 and DLX5 to retroelements. These factors are dysregulated in pre-eclampsia, as are their downstream consequences.
Results
We identify retrovirus-derived LTR8B as a placentally-relevant cis-regulatory element (CRE), not least within the PSG array, a primate-specific genomic region that exhibits high intraspecies variability. LTR8B at PSG9 is particularly influential affecting other PSG family members. Moreover, unique among PSGs, PSG9 produces both secreted and membrane-anchored isoforms. The retroelement MER65-int provides alternative polyA signals that enable the evolution of secreted PSG variants by truncating the ancestral CEACAM protein’s transmembrane domain. Functional characterization finds that LTR8B/PSG9 regulates the differentiation of multinucleated trophoblasts (syncytialization) and, like chorionic gonadotropin and syncytin1, determines the identity of syncytiotrophoblasts. Notably, PSG9 is the most upregulated PSG in PE, with levels correlated with GATA3 and DLX5 levels.
Conclusions
Retroelements contribute to the structural and expression evolution of PSG genes, facilitating lineage-specific placental evolution. The LTR8B/PSG9 regulatory network plays a central role in syncytiotrophoblast differentiation. Given the association between DLX5/GATA3 dysregulation and elevated PSG9 levels, along with PSG9’s expression in the first trimester, PSG9 shows potential as a predictive biomarker for preeclampsia.
Journal Article
Downregulation of p53 drives autophagy during human trophoblast differentiation
by
El-Heliebi, Amin
,
Kolb-Lenz, Dagmar
,
Hiden, Ursula
in
Autophagy
,
Autophagy - genetics
,
Biochemistry
2018
The placental barrier is crucial for the supply of nutrients and oxygen to the developing fetus and is maintained by differentiation and fusion of mononucleated cytotrophoblasts into the syncytiotrophoblast, a process only partially understood. Here transcriptome and pathway analyses during differentiation and fusion of cultured trophoblasts yielded p53 signaling as negative upstream regulator and indicated an upregulation of autophagy-related genes. We further showed p53 mRNA and protein levels decreased during trophoblast differentiation. Reciprocally, autophagic flux increased and cytoplasmic LC3B-GFP puncta became more abundant, indicating enhanced autophagic activity. In line, in human first trimester placenta p53 protein mainly localized to the cytotrophoblast, while autophagy marker LC3B as well as late autophagic compartments were predominantly detectable in the syncytiotrophoblast. Importantly, ectopic overexpression of p53 reduced levels of LC3B-II, supporting a negative regulatory role on autophagy in differentiating trophoblasts. This was also shown in primary trophoblasts and human first trimester placental explants, where pharmacological stabilization of p53 decreased LC3B-II levels. In summary our data suggest that differentiation-dependent downregulation of p53 is a prerequisite for activating autophagy in the syncytiotrophoblast.
Journal Article
Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus and the First Trimester Placenta: Hyperglycemia-Induced Effects on Trophoblast Proliferation, Cell Cycle Regulators, and Invasion
by
Hoch, Denise
,
Hiden, Ursula
,
Majali-Martinez, Alejandro
in
Adult
,
Cell cycle
,
Cell Cycle Checkpoints - drug effects
2021
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is associated with reduced fetal growth in early pregnancy, but a contributing role of the placenta has remained elusive. Thus, we investigated whether T1DM alters placental development in the first trimester. Using a protein array, the level of 60 cell-cycle-related proteins was determined in human first trimester placental tissue (gestational week 5–11) from control (n = 11) and T1DM pregnancies (n = 12). Primary trophoblasts (gestational week 7–12, n = 32) were incubated in the absence (control) or presence of hyperglycemia (25 mM D-glucose) and hyperosmolarity (5.5 mM D-glucose + 19.5 mM D-mannitol). We quantified the number of viable and dead trophoblasts (CASY Counter) and assessed cell cycle distribution (FACS) and trophoblast invasion using a transwell assay. T1DM was associated with a significant (p < 0.05) downregulation of Ki67 (−26%), chk1 (−25%), and p73 (−26%). The number of viable trophoblasts was reduced under hyperglycemia (−23%) and hyperosmolarity (−18%), whereas trophoblast invasion was increased only under hyperglycemia (+6%). Trophoblast cell death and cell cycle distribution remained unaffected. Collectively, our data demonstrate that hyperglycemia decreases trophoblast proliferation as a potential contributing factor to the reduced placental growth in T1DM in vivo.
Journal Article
Maternal COVID-19 causing intrauterine foetal demise with microthrombotic placental insufficiency: a case report
by
El-Heliebi, Amin
,
Huppertz, Berthold
,
Sallinger, Katja
in
Amniotic fluid
,
Asymptomatic
,
Autopsies
2023
Background
Pregnant women have an increased risk of getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 and are more prone to severe illness. Data on foetal demise in affected pregnancies and its underlying aetiology is scarce and pathomechanisms remain largely unclear.
Case
Herein we present the case of a pregnant woman with COVID-19 and intrauterine foetal demise. She had no previous obstetric or gynaecological history, and presented with mild symptoms at 34 + 3 weeks and no signs of foetal distress. At 35 + 6 weeks intrauterine foetal death was diagnosed. In the placental histopathology evaluation, we found inter- and perivillous fibrin depositions including viral particles in areas of degraded placental anatomy without presence of viral entry receptors and SARS-CoV-2 infection of the placenta.
Conclusion
This case demonstrates that maternal SARS-CoV-2 infection in the third trimester may lead to an unfavourable outcome for the foetus due to placental fibrin deposition in maternal COVID-19 disease possibly via a thrombogenic microenvironment, even when the foetus itself is not infected.
Novelty
Symptomatic COVID-19 of the mother may cause microthrombotic events in the placenta.
These microthrombotic events may lead to placental insufficiency and reduced growth velocity.
Further systematic clinical studies investigating the thrombogenic effect of a SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy are warranted.
Although a single case report, the findings support previous concerns about placental insufficiency after SARS-CoV-2 infection.
This report adds to existing literature and could help support recommendations for additional antenatal testing in similar settings.
Journal Article
Endothelial indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 regulates the placental vascular tone and is deficient in intrauterine growth restriction and pre-eclampsia
by
Zardoya-Laguardia, Pablo
,
Herzog, Sereina A.
,
Häusler, Martin
in
631/443/494/2732/2731
,
692/4017
,
82/51
2018
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 (IDO1) mediates the degradation of L-tryptophan (L-Trp) and is constitutively expressed in the chorionic vascular endothelium of the human placenta with highest levels in the microvasculature. Given that endothelial expression of IDO1 has been shown to regulate vascular tone and blood pressure in mice under the condition of systemic inflammation, we asked whether IDO1 is also involved in the regulation of placental blood flow and if yes, whether this function is potentially impaired in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and pre-eclampsia (PE). In the large arteries of the chorionic plate L-Trp induced relaxation only after upregulation of IDO1 using interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha. However,
ex vivo
placental perfusion of pre-constricted cotyledonic vasculature with L-Trp decreases the vessel back pressure without prior IDO1 induction. Further to this finding, IDO1 protein expression and activity is reduced in IUGR and PE when compared to gestational age–matched control tissue. These data suggest that L-Trp catabolism plays a role in the regulation of placental vascular tone, a finding which is potentially linked to placental and fetal growth. In this context our data suggest that IDO1 deficiency is related to the pathogenesis of IUGR and PE.
Journal Article