Placental proteome abnormalities in women with gestational diabetes and large-for-gestational-age newborns

Author:

Assi Emma,D'Addio Francesca,Mandò Chiara,Maestroni Anna,Loretelli Cristian,Ben Nasr Moufida,Usuelli Vera,Abdelsalam Ahmed,Seelam Andy Joe,Pastore Ida,Magagnotti Cinzia,Abdi Reza,El Essawy Basset,Folli FrancoORCID,Corradi Domenico,Zuccotti Gianvincenzo,Cetin Irene,Fiorina PaoloORCID

Abstract

IntroductionGestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is the most frequent metabolic complication during pregnancy and is associated with development of short-term and long-term complications for newborns, with large-for-gestational-age (LGA) being particularly common. Interestingly, the mechanism behind altered fetal growth in GDM is only partially understood.Research design and methodsA proteomic approach was used to analyze placental samples obtained from healthy pregnant women (n=5), patients with GDM (n=12) and with GDM and LGA (n=5). Effects of altered proteins on fetal development were tested in vitro in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs).ResultsHere, we demonstrate that the placental proteome is altered in pregnant women affected by GDM with LGA, with at least 37 proteins differentially expressed to a higher degree (p<0.05) as compared with those with GDM but without LGA. Among these proteins, 10 are involved in regulating tissue differentiation and/or fetal growth and development, with bone marrow proteoglycan (PRG2) and dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) being highly expressed. Both PRG2 and DPP-4 altered the transcriptome profile of stem cells differentiation markers when tested in vitro in hESCs, suggesting a potential role in the onset of fetal abnormalities.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that placental dysfunction may be directly responsible for abnormal fetal growth/development during GDM. Once established on a larger population, inhibitors of the pathways involving those altered factors may be tested in conditions such as GDM and LGA, in which therapeutic approaches are still lacking.

Funder

Italian Ministry of Health

SID Lombardia Grant

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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