Placental cell type deconvolution reveals that cell proportions drive preeclampsia gene expression differences

Author:

Campbell Kyle A.ORCID,Colacino Justin A.ORCID,Puttabyatappa Muraly,Dou John F.,Elkin Elana R.ORCID,Hammoud Saher S.,Domino Steven E.,Dolinoy Dana C.,Goodrich Jaclyn M.ORCID,Loch-Caruso Rita,Padmanabhan VasanthaORCID,Bakulski Kelly M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe placenta mediates adverse pregnancy outcomes, including preeclampsia, which is characterized by gestational hypertension and proteinuria. Placental cell type heterogeneity in preeclampsia is not well-understood and limits mechanistic interpretation of bulk gene expression measures. We generated single-cell RNA-sequencing samples for integration with existing data to create the largest deconvolution reference of 19 fetal and 8 maternal cell types from placental villous tissue (n = 9 biological replicates) at term (n = 40,494 cells). We deconvoluted eight published microarray case–control studies of preeclampsia (n = 173 controls, 157 cases). Preeclampsia was associated with excess extravillous trophoblasts and fewer mesenchymal and Hofbauer cells. Adjustment for cellular composition reduced preeclampsia-associated differentially expressed genes (log2 fold-change cutoff = 0.1, FDR < 0.05) from 1154 to 0, whereas downregulation of mitochondrial biogenesis, aerobic respiration, and ribosome biogenesis were robust to cell type adjustment, suggesting direct changes to these pathways. Cellular composition mediated a substantial proportion of the association between preeclampsia and FLT1 (37.8%, 95% CI [27.5%, 48.8%]), LEP (34.5%, 95% CI [26.0%, 44.9%]), and ENG (34.5%, 95% CI [25.0%, 45.3%]) overexpression. Our findings indicate substantial placental cellular heterogeneity in preeclampsia contributes to previously observed bulk gene expression differences. This deconvolution reference lays the groundwork for cellular heterogeneity-aware investigation into placental dysfunction and adverse birth outcomes.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

Ravitz Family Foundation Forbes Institute for Cancer Discovery at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center

University of Michigan M-Cubed Pilot Grant Program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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