Abstract
Among mammalian species, human reproduction has 2 outstanding features. The human hemochorial placentation is characterized by a very deep endovascular trophoblast invasion in the spiral arteries, reaching deep into the myometrium. This requires an agonistic direct cell-cell interaction between the maternal immune system and semiallogeneic trophoblast. The second feature is preeclampsia, a heterogeneous syndrome, a uniquely human condition. The human female is one of the few mammals exposed to her partner's semen on multiple occasions before conception. Regulatory T cells, especially paternal antigen-specific regulatory T cells, play an important role in the maintenance of pregnancy. Sexual intercourse increases the number of dendritic cells in the uterus that play an important role in the induction of paternal antigen-specific regulatory T cells. Paternal antigen-specific regulatory T cells maintain pregnancy by inducing tolerance. In the decidua basalis of preeclamptic cases, clonal regulatory T cells are reduced; these would normally monoclonally expand to recognize fetal or paternal antigens. Programmed cell death-1 expressed on T cells regulate cytotoxic T-cell activity and protect the fetus against maternal rejection. Programmed cell death-1 expression on clonal cytotoxic T cells is reduced in preeclampsia especially in early-onset preeclampsia, making the fetus and placenta vulnerable to attack by cytotoxic T cells. These phenomena can explain the epidemiologic phenomenon that preeclampsia is more common in couples using condom contraception, with shorter cohabitation periods, first pregnancies, first pregnancies in multiparous women when they change partner, and pregnancies after assisted reproduction using donated gametes. In contrast to its importance in early-onset preeclampsia, shallow trophoblast invasion does not play a role in the development of preeclampsia, that is, immune maladaptation does not seem to be involved. Late-onset preeclampsia (>34 weeks' gestation), representing 80% to 90% of preeclampsia in most developed countries with a "Western lifestyle," is strongly associated with maternal cardiometabolic variables (metabolic syndrome). Although the underlying pathophysiology might be quite different, syncytiotrophoblast stress is the final common pathway leading to the maternal syndrome among the subtypes of preeclampsia by causing an imbalance between proangiogenic factors (placental growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor) and antiangiogenic factors (soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 and soluble endoglin). Low-dose aspirin, started before 16 week's gestation, will prevent up to 60% of early-onset preeclampsia but will not prevent late-onset preeclampsia. Optimizing prepregnancy weight and controlling gestational weight gain may be the most effective ways to prevent preeclampsia.
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