NOTCH3 signalling controls human trophoblast stem cell expansion and differentiation

Author:

Dietrich Bianca1ORCID,Kunihs Victoria1ORCID,Lackner Andreas I.2ORCID,Meinhardt Gudrun1ORCID,Koo Bon-Kyoung3ORCID,Pollheimer Jürgen2ORCID,Haider Sandra1ORCID,Knöfler Martin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical University of Vienna 1 Placental Development Group , , A-1090 Vienna , Austria

2. Medical University of Vienna 2 Maternal-Fetal Immunology Group, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Reproductive Biology Unit , , A-1090 Vienna , Austria

3. Center for Genome Engineering, Institute for Basic Science 3 , Yuseong-Gu, Daejeon 34126 , Republic of Korea

Abstract

ABSTRACT Failures in growth and differentiation of the early human placenta are associated with severe pregnancy disorders such as pre-eclampsia and fetal growth restriction. However, regulatory mechanisms controlling development of placental epithelial cells, the trophoblasts, remain poorly elucidated. Using trophoblast stem cells (TSCs), trophoblast organoids (TB-ORGs) and primary cytotrophoblasts (CTBs) of early pregnancy, we herein show that autocrine NOTCH3 signalling controls human placental expansion and differentiation. The NOTCH3 receptor was specifically expressed in proliferative CTB progenitors and its active form, the nuclear NOTCH3 intracellular domain (NOTCH3-ICD), interacted with the transcriptional co-activator mastermind-like 1 (MAML1). Doxycycline-inducible expression of dominant-negative MAML1 in TSC lines provoked cell fusion and upregulation of genes specific for multinucleated syncytiotrophoblasts, which are the differentiated hormone-producing cells of the placenta. However, progenitor expansion and markers of trophoblast stemness and proliferation were suppressed. Accordingly, inhibition of NOTCH3 signalling diminished growth of TB-ORGs, whereas overexpression of NOTCH3-ICD in primary CTBs and TSCs showed opposite effects. In conclusion, the data suggest that canonical NOTCH3 signalling plays a key role in human placental development by promoting self-renewal of CTB progenitors.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

Reference87 articles.

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