Abstract

A majority of the studies examining the molecular regulation of human labor have been conducted using single gene approaches. While the technology to produce multi-dimensional datasets is readily available, the means for facile analysis of such data are limited. The objective of this study was to develop a systems approach to infer regulatory mechanisms governing global gene expression in cytokine-challenged cells in vitro, and to apply these methods to predict gene regulatory networks (GRNs) in intrauterine tissues during term parturition. To this end, microarray analysis was applied to human amnion mesenchymal cells (AMCs) stimulated with interleukin-1β, and differentially expressed transcripts were subjected to hierarchical clustering, temporal expression profiling, and motif enrichment analysis, from which a GRN was constructed. These methods were then applied to fetal membrane specimens collected in the absence or presence of spontaneous term labor. Analysis of cytokine-responsive genes in AMCs revealed a sterile immune response signature, with promoters enriched in response elements for several inflammation-associated transcription factors. In comparison to the fetal membrane dataset, there were 34 genes commonly upregulated, many of which were part of an acute inflammation gene expression signature. Binding motifs for nuclear factor-κB were prominent in the gene interaction and regulatory networks for both datasets; however, we found little evidence to support the utilization of pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) signaling. The tissue specimens were also enriched for transcripts governed by hypoxia-inducible factor. The approach presented here provides an uncomplicated means to infer global relationships among gene clusters involved in cellular responses to labor-associated signals.

Highlights

  • The last three decades have seen prodigious growth in our knowledge of the basic principles of parturition in women

  • In the current experiments amnion mesenchymal cells (AMCs) were chosen as a relevant in vitro model system in which to study the inflammatory component of labor

  • Our laboratory previously used this model to examine the induction of selected gene targets, such as prostaglandin E synthase (Ptges, known as microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1, mPGES-1) and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (Ptgs2), in response to IL-1b [12]

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Summary

Introduction

The last three decades have seen prodigious growth in our knowledge of the basic principles of parturition in women. We and others have shown that cytokines elicit the up-regulation of (PTGS2) for the synthesis of PGE2 and PGF2a through the activation of heterodimeric (p65/ p50) NF-kB and its inhibitor IkB-a in a variety of in vitro culture preparations of intrauterine cell types [11,12,13,14,15]. The genes encoding many cytokines (e.g., IL-1b and TNF-a), chemokines (e.g., IL-8) and MMPs (e.g., MMP-2, MMP-9) are themselves driven from NF-kB-binding promoters [16,17]. Most of this information has been obtained by studying one or a few biomolecules in any given body of work

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