Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics, College of Medicine, Medical Research and Education Bldg., Texas A&M University Health Science Center, 8447 Riverside Parkway, Bryan, TX, 77807-3260, USA.
Texas A&M Institute for Neuroscience, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
Biol Sex Differ. 2020 Sep 10;11(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s13293-020-00327-2.
Most persons with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) remain undiagnosed or are diagnosed in later life. To address the need for earlier diagnosis, we previously assessed miRNAs in the blood plasma of pregnant women who were classified as unexposed to alcohol (UE), heavily exposed with affected infants (HEa), or heavily exposed with apparently unaffected infants (HEua). We reported that maternal miRNAs predicted FASD-related growth and psychomotor deficits in infants. Here, we assessed whether fetal sex influenced alterations in maternal circulating miRNAs following prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE). To overcome the loss of statistical power due to disaggregating maternal samples by fetal sex, we adapted a strategy of iterative bootstrap resampling with replacement to assess the stability of statistical parameter estimates. Bootstrap estimates of parametric and effect size tests identified male and female fetal sex-associated maternal miRNA responses to PAE that were not observed in the aggregated sample. Additionally, we observed, in HEa mothers of female, but not male fetuses, a network of co-secreted miRNAs whose expression was linked to miRNAs encoded on the X-chromosome. Interestingly, the number of significant miRNA correlations for the HEua group mothers with female fetuses was intermediate between HEa and UE mothers at mid-pregnancy, but more similar to UE mothers by the end of pregnancy. Collectively, these data show that fetal sex predicts maternal circulating miRNA adaptations, a critical consideration when adopting maternal miRNAs as diagnostic biomarkers. Moreover, a maternal co-secretion network, predominantly in pregnancies with female fetuses, emerged as an index of risk for adverse birth outcomes due to PAE.
大多数胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASD)患者未被诊断或在后期被诊断。为了满足更早诊断的需求,我们之前评估了孕妇血浆中的 microRNA,这些孕妇分为未接触酒精(UE)、严重接触酒精且婴儿受影响(HEa)或严重接触酒精且婴儿似乎未受影响(HEua)。我们报告说,母体 microRNA 可预测婴儿的 FASD 相关生长和精神运动缺陷。在这里,我们评估了胎儿性别是否会影响产前酒精暴露(PAE)后母体循环 microRNA 的变化。为了克服因按胎儿性别分解母体样本而导致的统计功效丧失的问题,我们采用了迭代 bootstrap 重采样策略来评估统计参数估计值的稳定性。bootstrap 估计的参数和效应大小测试确定了与 PAE 相关的母体 microRNA 对雄性和雌性胎儿的性别反应,而在汇总样本中未观察到这些反应。此外,我们观察到 HEa 母亲的雌性胎儿,但不是雄性胎儿,存在一个共分泌 microRNA 网络,其表达与 X 染色体上编码的 microRNA 相关。有趣的是,HEua 组母亲的雌性胎儿的显著 miRNA 相关性数量在妊娠中期介于 HEa 和 UE 组母亲之间,但在妊娠晚期更类似于 UE 组母亲。总的来说,这些数据表明胎儿性别预测了母体循环 microRNA 的适应性,这是采用母体 microRNA 作为诊断生物标志物的关键考虑因素。此外,一个主要出现在有雌性胎儿的妊娠中的母体共分泌网络,作为由于 PAE 导致不良出生结局的风险指标出现了。