Schminkey Donna L, Groer Maureen
University of Virginia, United States.
University of South Florida, United States.
Med Hypotheses. 2014 Jun;82(6):721-9. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2014.03.013. Epub 2014 Mar 17.
Recent research challenges long-held hypotheses about mechanisms through which pregnancy induces maternal immune suppression or tolerance of the embryo/fetus. It is now understood that normal pregnancy engages the immune system and that the immune milieu changes with advancing gestation. We suggest that pregnancy mimics the innate immune system's response to stress, causing a sterile inflammatory response that is necessary for successful reproduction. The relationship between external stressors and immunomodulation in pregnancy has been acknowledged, but the specific mechanisms are still being explicated. Implantation and the first trimester are times of immune activation and intensive inflammation in the uterine environment. A period of immune quiescence during the second trimester allows for the growth and development of the maturing fetus. Labor is also an inflammatory event. The length of gestation and timing of parturition can be influenced by environmental stressors. These stressors affect pregnancy through neuroendocrine interaction with the immune system, specifically through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis. Trophoblastic cells that constitute the maternal-fetal interface appear to harness the maternal immune system to promote and maximize the reproductive success of the mother and fetus. Pregnancy is a time of upregulated innate immune responses and decreased adaptive, cell-mediated responses. The inflammatory processes of pregnancy resemble an immune response to brief naturalistic stressors: there is a shift from T helper (Th) 1 to T helper (Th) 2 dominant adaptive immunity with a concomitant shift in cytokine production, decreased proliferation of T cells, and decreased cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) cells. Inclusion of both murine and human studies, allows an exploration of insights into how trophoblasts influence the activity of the maternal innate immune system during gestation.
近期研究对长期以来关于妊娠诱导母体免疫抑制或对胚胎/胎儿产生免疫耐受的机制的假说提出了挑战。现在人们认识到,正常妊娠会激活免疫系统,且免疫环境会随着妊娠进展而发生变化。我们认为,妊娠模拟了先天免疫系统对压力的反应,引发了一种无菌性炎症反应,这对成功繁殖是必要的。外部应激源与妊娠期间免疫调节之间的关系已得到认可,但具体机制仍在阐释之中。着床期和孕早期是子宫环境中免疫激活和强烈炎症反应的时期。孕中期的免疫静止期有利于成熟胎儿的生长发育。分娩也是一个炎症事件。妊娠时长和分娩时间可能会受到环境应激源的影响。这些应激源通过与免疫系统的神经内分泌相互作用来影响妊娠,具体是通过下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺(HPA)轴和下丘脑 - 垂体 - 卵巢轴。构成母胎界面的滋养层细胞似乎利用母体免疫系统来促进并最大化母体和胎儿的生殖成功率。妊娠期间先天免疫反应上调,适应性细胞介导反应减弱。妊娠的炎症过程类似于对短暂自然应激源的免疫反应:从辅助性T细胞(Th)1主导的适应性免疫向辅助性T细胞(Th)2主导的适应性免疫转变,同时细胞因子产生发生变化,T细胞增殖减少,自然杀伤(NK)细胞的细胞毒性降低。纳入小鼠和人类研究能够探索关于滋养层细胞在妊娠期间如何影响母体先天免疫系统活性的见解。