Author:
McClements Lana,Richards Claire,Patel Nikayla,Chen Hao,Sesperez Kimberly,Bubb Kristen J.,Karlstaedt Anja,Aksentijevic Dunja
Abstract
AbstractPreeclampsia is a cardiovascular pregnancy complication characterised by new onset hypertension and organ damage or intrauterine growth restriction. It is one of the leading causes of maternal and fetal mortality in pregnancy globally. Short of pre-term delivery of the fetus and placenta, treatment options are limited. Consequently, preeclampsia leads to increased cardiovascular disease risk in both mothers and offspring later in life. Here we aim to examine the impact of the reduced uterine perfusion pressure (RUPP) rat model of preeclampsia on the maternal cardiovascular system, placental and fetal heart metabolism. The surgical RUPP model was induced in pregnant rats by applying silver clips around the aorta and uterine arteries on gestational day 14, resulting in ~ 40% uterine blood flow reduction. The experiment was terminated on gestational day 19 and metabolomic profile of placentae, maternal and fetal hearts analysed using high-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy. Impairment of uterine perfusion in RUPP rats caused placental and cardiac hypoxia and a series of metabolic adaptations: altered energetics, carbohydrate, lipid and amino acid metabolism of placentae and maternal hearts. Comparatively, the fetal metabolic phenotype was mildly affected. Nevertheless, long-term effects of these changes in both mothers and the offspring should be investigated further in the future.
Funder
Faculty of Science,University of Technology Sydney
Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
UTS Research Excellence Scholarship
British Heart Foundation
National Institutes of Health Award
Diabetes UK Grant
Barts Charity Grant
Wellcome Trust
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
15 articles.
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