Moore Lorna G, Shriver Mark, Bemis Lynne, Vargas Enrique
Colorado Center for Altitude Medicine and Physiology, Division of Emergency Medicine, USA.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2006;588:101-18. doi: 10.1007/978-0-387-34817-9_10.
Coordinated maternal/fetal responses to pregnancy are required to ensure continuous O2 delivery to the developing organism. Mammals employ distinctive reproductive strategies that afford their young an improved chance of survival through the completion or the reproductive period. Thus, mortality prior to the end of the reproductive period is concentrated in the earliest phases of the lifecycle. At high altitude, fetal growth restriction reduces birth weight and likely compromises survival during the early postnatal period. Population variation in the frequency of the altitude-associated increase in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) demonstrates that multigenerational Tibetan and Andean high-altitude populations are protected compared with shorter duration, European or Han (Chinese) residents. This experiment of nature permits testing the hypothesis that genetic factors (a) influence susceptibility to altitude-associated IUGR, (b) act on maternal vascular adjustments to pregnancy determining uteroplacental blood flow, and (c) involve genes which regulate and/or are regulated by hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs). Serial, studies during pregnancy as well as postpartum in Andean and European residents of high (3600 m) and low (300 m) altitude will permit evaluation of whether uteroplacental O2 delivery is lower in the European than Andean women and, if so, the physiological factors responsible. Comparisons of HIF-targeted vasoactive substances and SNPs in or near HIF-regulatory or targeted genes will permit determination of whether these regions are distinctive in the Andean population. Studies coupling genetic and genomic approaches with more traditional physiological measures may be productively employed for determining the genetic mechanisms influencing physiological adaptation to high altitude.
母体/胎儿对妊娠的协调反应对于确保向发育中的生物体持续输送氧气至关重要。哺乳动物采用独特的生殖策略,通过整个生殖期来提高其幼崽的生存几率。因此,生殖期结束前的死亡率集中在生命周期的最早阶段。在高海拔地区,胎儿生长受限会降低出生体重,并可能影响出生后早期的存活率。与居住时间较短的欧洲或汉族(中国)居民相比,与海拔相关的宫内生长受限(IUGR)频率的人群差异表明,藏族和安第斯高海拔多代人群受到了保护。这种自然实验允许检验以下假设:遗传因素(a)影响对海拔相关IUGR的易感性,(b)作用于母体对妊娠的血管调节,决定子宫胎盘血流量,以及(c)涉及调节和/或受缺氧诱导因子(HIFs)调节的基因。对高海拔(3600米)和低海拔(300米)的安第斯和欧洲居民在孕期及产后进行系列研究,将有助于评估欧洲女性的子宫胎盘氧气输送是否低于安第斯女性,如果是,确定其生理因素。比较HIF靶向的血管活性物质以及HIF调节或靶向基因内或附近的单核苷酸多态性(SNPs),将有助于确定这些区域在安第斯人群中是否独特。将遗传和基因组方法与更传统的生理测量方法相结合的研究,可能有助于确定影响对高海拔生理适应的遗传机制。