Abstract

During pregnancy, the uterine spiral arteries undergo major vascular remodeling to ensure sufficient uteroplacental perfusion to support the fetus. In pregnancies complicated by hypertensive disorders, this remodeling is deficient leading to impaired uteroplacental blood flow and poor maternal and fetal outcomes. The underlying genetic mechanisms for failed vascular remodeling are not fully understood. This study aimed to examine the early-pregnancy-associated gene changes in the uterine arteries of spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats (SHRSP) compared with their normotensive counterparts, Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). Uterine arteries from gestational day 6.5 WKY and SHRSP were processed for RNA-sequencing, along with virgin, age-matched controls for each strain. Gene expression changes were identified and biological pathways were implicated and interpretated using ingenuity pathway analysis (IPA). This study found that WKY uterine arteries from early pregnancy exhibit a gene expression pattern that is suggestive of a pregnancy-dependent reduction in Ca2+ handling and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) components and an increase in ATP production. In contrast, the expression pattern of pregnant SHRSP uterine arteries was dominated by an elevated immune response and increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and downstream effectors of the RAAS. These results suggest that in a rat model, hypertension during pregnancy impacts uterine artery gene expression patterns as early as the first week of pregnancy. The pathway changes involved may underlie or contribute to the adverse vascular remodeling and resultant placental ischemia and systemic vascular dysfunction observed in SHRSP in late gestation.

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