Maternal iron deficiency perturbs embryonic cardiovascular development

Author:

Kalisch-Smith Jacinta I.ORCID,Ved NikitaORCID,Szumska DorotaORCID,Munro Jacob,Troup Michael,Harris Shelley E.,Jacquemot Aimée,Miller Jack J.,Stuart Eleanor M.,Wolna Magda,Hardman Emily,Prin Fabrice,Lana-Elola Eva,Aoidi Rifdat,Fisher Elizabeth M. C.ORCID,Tybulewicz Victor L. J.,Mohun Timothy J.,Lakhal-Littleton Samira,Giannoulatou Eleni,Sparrow Duncan B.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractCongenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common type of birth defect, with a global prevalence of 0.9% of live births1. Most research in the last 30 years has focused on finding genetic causes of CHD. However, despite the association of over 100 genes with CHD, mutations in these genes only explain ~30% of cases2. Many of the remaining cases of CHD are caused by in utero exposure to environmental factors3. Here we have identified a completely new environmental teratogen causing CHD: maternal iron deficiency. In humans, iron deficiency anaemia is a major global health problem. 38% of pregnant women worldwide are anaemic4, and at least half of these are due to iron deficiency, the most prevalent micronutrient deficiency. We describe a mouse model of maternal iron deficiency anaemia that causes severe cardiovascular defects in her offspring. We show that these defects likely arise from increased retinoic acid signalling in iron deficient embryos, probably due to reduced activity of the iron-dependent retinoic acid catabolic CYP26 enzymes. The defects can be prevented by maternal iron administration early in pregnancy, and are also greatly reduced in offspring of mothers deficient in both iron and the retinoic acid precursor vitamin A. Finally, one puzzling feature of many genetic forms of CHD in humans is the considerable variation in penetrance and severity of defects. We show that maternal iron deficiency acts as a significant modifier of heart and craniofacial phenotype in a mouse model of Down syndrome. Given the high incidence of maternal iron deficiency, peri-conceptional iron monitoring and supplementation could be a viable strategy to reduce the prevalence and severity of CHD in human populations worldwide.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference108 articles.

1. Global birth prevalence of congenital heart defects 1970–2017: updated systematic review and meta-analysis of 260 studies

2. Identification of clinically actionable variants from genome sequencing of families with congenital heart disease

3. Kalisch-Smith, J. I. , Ved, N. & Sparrow, D. B. in Heart Development and Disease (eds B. G. Bruneau & P. R. Riley ) (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, in press).

4. Worl Health Organization. The global prevalence of anaemia in 2011. (2015).

5. Gestational stress induces the unfolded protein response, resulting in heart defects

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