Journal
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 599, Issue 17, Pages 4153-4181Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP281994
Keywords
endoplasmic reticulum stress; placental development; pregnancy complications; trophoblast differentiation
Categories
Funding
- Centre for Trophoblast Research
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The research demonstrates that alleviation of intrauterine endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress could improve pregnancy outcomes. Increased ER stress was found to be associated with placental dysmorphogenesis and higher incidences of early pregnancy loss in a mouse model. Therapeutic targeting of ER stress may be beneficial for women with pre-gestational metabolic or gynaecological conditions.
Key points Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress promotes placental dysmorphogenesis and is associated with poor pregnancy outcomes. We show that unfolded protein response signalling pathways located in the ER drive differentiation of mouse trophoblast stem cells into trophoblast subtypes involved in development of the placental labyrinth zone and trophoblast invasion. In a mouse model of chronic ER stress (Eif2s1(tm1RjK)), higher ER stress in homozygous blastocysts is accompanied by reduced trophectoderm cell number and developmental delay and also is associated with an increased incidence of early pregnancy loss. Administration of the chemical chaperone, tauroursodeoxycholic acid, to Eif2s1(+/)(tm1RjK) heterozygous females during pregnancy alleviated ER stress in the mutant placenta, restored normal trophoblast populations and reduced the frequency of early pregnancy loss. Our results suggest that alleviation of intrauterine ER stress could provide a potential therapeutic target to improve pregnancy outcome in women with pre-gestational metabolic or gynaecological conditions. Women with pre-gestational health conditions (e.g. obesity, diabetes) or gynaecological problems (e.g. endometriosis) are at increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes including miscarriage, pre-eclampsia and fetal growth restriction. Increasing evidence suggests that unfavourable intrauterine conditions leading to poor implantation and/or defective placentation are a possible causative factor. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) unfolded protein response (UPRER) signalling pathways are a convergence point of various physiological stress stimuli that can be triggered by an unfavourable intrauterine environment. Therefore, we explored the impact of ER stress on mouse trophoblast differentiation in vitro, mouse blastocyst formation and early placenta development in the Eif2s1(tm1RjK) mutant mouse model of chronic ER stress. Chemically-manipulated ER stress or activation of UPRER pathways in a mouse trophoblast stem cell line promoted lineage-specific differentiation. Co-treatment with specific UPRER pathway inhibitors rescued this effect. Although the inner cell mass was unaffected, the trophectoderm of homozygous Eif2s1(tm1RjK) blastocysts exhibited ER stress associated with a reduced cell number. Furthermore, one-third of Eif2s1(tm1RjK) homozygous blastocysts exhibited severe developmental defects. We have previously reported a reduced trophoblast population and premature trophoblast differentiation in Eif2s1(tm1RjK) homozygous placentas at mid-gestation. Here, we demonstrate that treatment of Eif2s1(+/tm1RjK) heterozygous pregnant females with the chemical chaperone tauroursodeoxycholic acid alleviated ER stress, restored the trophoblast population and reduced the frequency of embryonic lethality. Our data suggest that therapeutic targeting of ER stress may improve pregnancy outcome in women with pre-gestational metabolic or gynaecological conditions.
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