Preeclampsia is life threatening condition affecting about 10% of all pregnancies. A potential mechanism is via malfunctioning syncytiotrophoblasts in the placenta. RhoBTB1 is an adapter protein for the CUL3 E3 ubiquitin ligase which delivers protein substrates for proteasomal degradation. An analysis of gene expression databases revealed that the highest level of RhoBTB1 expression is in the placenta. RNAscope in situ hybridization data reveals that RhoBTB1 expression is specifically localized to syncytiotrophoblasts. In blood vessels, RhoBTB1 controls the state of nitric oxide mediated vasodilation because it acts as a substrate adaptor for Phosphodiesterase 5. Thus, we wanted to identify potential protein targets of RhoBTB1 in the placenta to assess if RhoBTB1 plays a role in placental function. To simplify the first identification of RhoBTB1 binding proteins, we employed HTR-8 /SVneo (HTR-8) cells as a model of placental trophoblast cells. We biotinylated the HTR-8 proteome utilizing ascorbate peroxidase (APEX2) proximity labelling system followed by mass spectrometry to identify RhoBTB1 targets. We employed a fusion protein consisting of the C-terminal half of RhoBTB1 (B1B2C), the region required for the binding of other protein substrates, and a control lacking the most C-terminal region (B1B2). We next chose proteins with binding to B1B2C > B1B2 of 2-fold or greater that were expressed in the placenta based on the Human Protein Atlas. Rho GTPase Activating Protein 29 (ARHGAP29), which controls the regulation of small GTP binding proteins, and S-phase Kinase associated Protein 2 (SKP2), a regulator of cell cycle progression was studied further. SKP2 is interesting because it exhibits a tissue specific tropism for placental expression with its highest expression in extravillous trophoblasts, cytotrophoblasts, and syncytiotrophoblasts. Expression of ARHGAP29 and SKP2 in HTR-8 cells were markedly upregulated by MLN4924 suggesting they are regulated by the CUL pathway. They were also modestly upregulated after partial inhibition of RhoBTB1 by siRNA suggesting they may be RhoBTB1-CUL3 targets. Studies are ongoing to validate the physical interaction of ARHGAP29 and SKP2 with RhoBTB1 by co-immunoprecipitation. We are also using RNAscope to assess the co-expression of RhoBTB1, ARHGAP29 and SKP2 in the human placenta from normal and preeclamptic pregnancies.