Abstract

Oxygen plays a central role in human placental pathologies including preeclampsia, a leading cause of fetal and maternal death and morbidity. Insufficient uteroplacental oxygenation in preeclampsia is believed to be responsible for the molecular events leading to the clinical manifestations of this disease. Using high-throughput functional genomics, we determined the global gene expression profiles of placentae from high altitude pregnancies, a natural in vivo model of chronic hypoxia, as well as that of first-trimester explants under 3 and 20% oxygen, an in vitro organ culture model. We next compared the genomic profile from these two models with that obtained from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia. Microarray data were analyzed using the binary tree-structured vector quantization algorithm, which generates global gene expression maps. Our results highlight a striking global gene expression similarity between 3% O(2)-treated explants, high-altitude placentae, and importantly placentae from preeclamptic pregnancies. We demonstrate herein the utility of explant culture and high-altitude placenta as biologically relevant and powerful models for studying the oxygen-mediated events in preeclampsia. Our results provide molecular evidence that aberrant global placental gene expression changes in preeclampsia may be due to reduced oxygenation and that these events can successfully be mimicked by in vivo and in vitro models of placental hypoxia.

Highlights

  • Oxygen plays a central role in human placental pathologies including preeclampsia, a leading cause of fetal and maternal death and morbidity

  • We demonstrate the utility of explant culture and high-altitude placenta as biologically relevant and powerful models for studying the oxygenmediated events in preeclampsia

  • Our results provide molecular evidence that aberrant global placental gene expression changes in preeclampsia may be due to reduced oxygenation and that these events can successfully be mimicked by in vivo and in vitro models of placental hypoxia. (J Clin Endocrinol Metab 90: 4299 – 4308, 2005)

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Summary

Objectives

The main objective of this study was to assess, using a high-throughput genomic approach, the relevance of in vitro and in vivo models of placental hypoxia for mimicking and studying gene expression affected by reduced oxygenation and to relate these findings to placentae affected by trophoblast-related disorders. The primary objective of our work was not to identify specific differential gene expression but rather to identify clusters of genes that may be expressed in conditions of in vivo and in vitro placental hypoxia and relate these clusters to a pathologic state affected by aberrant placental oxygenation

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