Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, NYU Langone Hospital-Long Island, New York University Long Island School of Medicine, Mineola, NY.
Women and Children's Research Laboratory, New York University Long Island School of Medicine, Mineola, NY; Division of Hematologic Neoplasia, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021 Dec;225(6):681.e1-681.e20. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2021.06.075. Epub 2021 Jun 26.
Pregnancy represents a unique challenge for the maternal-fetal immune interface, requiring a balance between immunosuppression, which is essential for the maintenance of a semiallogeneic fetus, and proinflammatory host defense to protect the maternal-fetal interface from invading organisms. Adaptation to repeated inflammatory stimuli (endotoxin tolerance) may be critical in preventing inflammation-induced preterm birth caused by exaggerated maternal inflammatory responses to mild or moderate infections that are common during pregnancy. However, the exact mechanisms contributing to the maintenance of tolerance to repeated infections are not completely understood. MicroRNAs play important roles in pregnancy with several microRNAs implicated in gestational tissue function and in pathologic pregnancy conditions. MicroRNA-519c, a member of the chromosome 19 microRNA cluster, is a human-specific microRNA mainly expressed in the placenta. However, its role in pregnancy is largely unknown.
This study aimed to explore the role of "endotoxin tolerance" failure in the pathogenesis of an exaggerated inflammatory response often seen in inflammation-mediated preterm birth. In this study, we investigated the role of microRNA-519c, a placenta-specific microRNA, as a key regulator of endotoxin tolerance at the maternal-fetal interface.
Using a placental explant culture system, samples from term and second-trimester placentas were treated with lipopolysaccharide. After 24 hours, the conditioned media were collected for analysis, and the placental explants were re-exposed to repeated doses of lipopolysaccharide for 3 days. The supernatant was analyzed for inflammatory markers, the presence of extracellular vesicles, and microRNAs. To study the possible mechanism of action of the microRNAs, we evaluated the phosphodiesterase 3B pathway involved in tumor necrosis factor alpha production using a microRNA mimic and phosphodiesterase 3B small interfering RNA transfection. Finally, we analyzed human placental samples from different gestational ages and from women affected by inflammation-associated pregnancies.
Our data showed that repeated exposure of the human placenta to endotoxin challenges induced a tolerant phenotype characterized by decreased tumor necrosis factor alpha and up-regulated interleukin-10 levels. This reaction was mediated by the placenta-specific microRNA-519c packaged within placental extracellular vesicles. Lipopolysaccharide treatment increased the extracellular vesicles that were positive for the exosome tetraspanin markers, namely CD9, CD63, and CD81, and secreted primarily by trophoblasts. Primary human trophoblast cells transfected with a microRNA-519c mimic decreased phosphodiesterase 3B, whereas a lack of phosphodiesterase 3B, achieved by small interfering RNA transfection, led to decreased tumor necrosis factor alpha production. These data support the hypothesis that the anti-inflammatory action of microRNA-519c was mediated by a down-regulation of the phosphodiesterase 3B pathway, leading to inhibition of tumor necrosis factor alpha production. Furthermore, human placentas from normal and inflammation-associated pregnancies demonstrated that a decreased placental microRNA-519c level was linked to infection-induced inflammatory pathologies during pregnancy.
We identified microRNA-519c, a human placenta-specific microRNA, as a novel regulator of immune adaptation associated with infection-induced preterm birth at the maternal-fetal interface. Our study serves as a basis for future experiments to explore the potential use of microRNA-519c as a biomarker for infection-induced preterm birth.
妊娠对母体-胎儿免疫界面提出了独特的挑战,需要在免疫抑制和促炎宿主防御之间取得平衡,前者对于维持半同种异体胎儿至关重要,后者则保护母体-胎儿界面免受入侵的病原体侵害。对反复炎症刺激(内毒素耐受)的适应可能对预防由母体对轻度或中度感染的炎症反应过度引起的炎症性早产至关重要,因为这些感染在妊娠期间很常见。然而,对于维持对反复感染的耐受的确切机制还不完全清楚。微小 RNA 在妊娠中发挥重要作用,其中一些微小 RNA 参与妊娠组织功能和病理性妊娠情况。微小 RNA-519c 是 19 号染色体微小 RNA 簇的一个成员,是一种主要在胎盘表达的人类特异性微小 RNA。然而,其在妊娠中的作用在很大程度上尚不清楚。
本研究旨在探讨“内毒素耐受”失败在炎症介导的早产中经常出现的过度炎症反应发病机制中的作用。在这项研究中,我们研究了胎盘特异性微小 RNA-519c 作为母体-胎儿界面内毒素耐受的关键调节因子的作用。
使用胎盘组织培养系统,用脂多糖处理足月和中期胎盘样本。24 小时后,收集条件培养基进行分析,然后将胎盘组织再次暴露于重复剂量的脂多糖中 3 天。分析上清液中的炎症标志物、细胞外囊泡的存在和微小 RNA。为了研究微小 RNA 可能的作用机制,我们使用微小 RNA 模拟物和磷酸二酯酶 3B 小干扰 RNA 转染评估了肿瘤坏死因子 α 产生中涉及的磷酸二酯酶 3B 途径。最后,我们分析了来自不同妊娠龄的人类胎盘样本和受炎症相关妊娠影响的人类胎盘样本。
我们的数据表明,反复暴露于内毒素会诱导人类胎盘产生耐受表型,其特征是肿瘤坏死因子 α 减少和白细胞介素 10 水平升高。这种反应是由胎盘特异性微小 RNA-519c 介导的,该微小 RNA 包装在胎盘细胞外囊泡中。脂多糖处理增加了表达外泌体四跨膜蛋白标志物(即 CD9、CD63 和 CD81)的细胞外囊泡,这些标志物主要由滋养层细胞分泌。用微小 RNA-519c 模拟物转染的原代人滋养层细胞降低了磷酸二酯酶 3B,而通过小干扰 RNA 转染降低磷酸二酯酶 3B 则导致肿瘤坏死因子 α 产生减少。这些数据支持这样的假设,即微小 RNA-519c 的抗炎作用是通过下调磷酸二酯酶 3B 途径介导的,从而抑制肿瘤坏死因子 α 的产生。此外,来自正常和炎症相关妊娠的人类胎盘表明,感染诱导的妊娠炎症性病变与胎盘微小 RNA-519c 水平降低有关。
我们确定了微小 RNA-519c,一种人类胎盘特异性微小 RNA,是与母体-胎儿界面上感染诱导的早产相关的免疫适应的新调节剂。我们的研究为未来探索微小 RNA-519c 作为感染诱导的早产的生物标志物的潜力提供了依据。