4.6 Article

Extracellularly Released Calreticulin Induced by Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Impairs Syncytialization of Cytotrophoblast Model BeWo Cells

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10061305

Keywords

calreticulin; syncytialization; trophoblast; preeclampsia; endoplasmic reticulum stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [19K09784, 18K16809, 20K18228, JP18K16776]
  2. Wakayama Medical University
  3. Japan Society for the Study of Hypertension in Pregnancy
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K16809, 19K09784, 20K18228] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This study investigated how ER stress exposes the placenta to the risk of preeclampsia, revealing that CRT is upregulated in serum samples from preeclamptic women but not in placental specimens, and ER stress causes extracellular release of CRT, which suppresses cytotrophoblast syncytialization.
The pregnancy-specific syndrome preeclampsia is a major cause of maternal mortality throughout the world. The initial insult resulting in the development of preeclampsia is inadequate trophoblast invasion, which may lead to reduced maternal perfusion of the placenta and placental dysfunction, such as insufficient trophoblast syncytialization. Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress has been implicated in the pathology of preeclampsia and serves as the major risk factor. Our previous studies suggested critical roles of calreticulin (CRT), which is an ER-resident stress response protein, in extravillous trophoblast invasion and cytotrophoblast syncytialization. Here, we studied the mechanism by which ER stress exposes the placenta to the risk of preeclampsia. We found that CRT was upregulated in the serum samples, but not in the placental specimens, from preeclamptic women. By using BeWo cells, an established model of cytotrophoblasts that syncytialize in the presence of forskolin, we demonstrated that thapsigargin-induced ER stress caused extracellular release of CRT from BeWo cells and that the extracellular CRT suppressed forskolin-induced release of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin and altered subcellular localization of E-cadherin, which is a key adhesion molecule associated with syncytialization. Our results together provide evidence that induction of ER stress leads to extracellular CRT release, which may contribute to placental dysfunction by suppressing cytotrophoblast syncytialization.

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