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Placental phenotype and resource allocation to fetal growth are modified by the timing and degree of hypoxia during mouse pregnancy
- Source :
- The Journal of Physiology
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Key points Hypoxia is a major cause of fetal growth restriction, particularly at high altitude, although little is known about its effects on placental phenotype and resource allocation to fetal growth.In the present study, maternal hypoxia induced morphological and functional changes in the mouse placenta, which depended on the timing and severity of hypoxia, as well as the degree of maternal hypophagia.Hypoxia at 13% inspired oxygen induced beneficial changes in placental morphology, nutrient transport and metabolic signalling pathways associated with little or no change in fetal growth, irrespective of gestational age.Hypoxia at 10% inspired oxygen adversely affected placental phenotype and resulted in severe fetal growth restriction, which was due partly to maternal hypophagia.There is a threshold between 13% and 10% inspired oxygen, corresponding to altitudes of ∼3700 m and 5800 m, respectively, at which the mouse placenta no longer adapts to support fetal resource allocation. This has implications for high altitude human pregnancies. Abstract The placenta adapts its transport capacity to nutritional cues developmentally, although relatively little is known about placental transport phenotype in response to hypoxia, a major cause of fetal growth restriction. The present study determined the effects of both moderate hypoxia (13% inspired O2) between days (D)11 and D16 or D14 and D19 of pregnancy and severe hypoxia (10% inspired O2) from D14 to D19 on placental morphology, transport capacity and fetal growth on D16 and D19 (term∼D20.5), relative to normoxic mice in 21% O2. Placental morphology adapted beneficially to 13% O2; fetal capillary volume increased at both ages, exchange area increased at D16 and exchange barrier thickness reduced at D19. Exposure to 13% O2 had no effect on placental nutrient transport on D16 but increased placental uptake and clearance of 3H‐methyl‐d‐glucose at D19. By contrast, 10% O2 impaired fetal vascularity, increased barrier thickness and reduced placental 14C‐methylaminoisobutyric acid clearance at D19. Consequently, fetal growth was only marginally affected in 13% O2 (unchanged at D16 and −5% at D19) but was severely restricted in 10% O2 (−21% at D19). The hypoxia‐induced changes in placental phenotype were accompanied by altered placental insulin‐like growth factor (IGF)‐2 expression and insulin/IGF signalling, as well as by maternal hypophagia depending on the timing and severity of the hypoxia. Overall, the present study shows that the mouse placenta can integrate signals of oxygen and nutrient availability, possibly through the insulin‐IGF pathway, to adapt its phenotype and optimize maternal resource allocation to fetal growth during late pregnancy. It also suggests that there is a threshold between 13% and 10% inspired O2 at which these adaptations no longer occur.<br />Key points Hypoxia is a major cause of fetal growth restriction, particularly at high altitude, although little is known about its effects on placental phenotype and resource allocation to fetal growth.In the present study, maternal hypoxia induced morphological and functional changes in the mouse placenta, which depended on the timing and severity of hypoxia, as well as the degree of maternal hypophagia.Hypoxia at 13% inspired oxygen induced beneficial changes in placental morphology, nutrient transport and metabolic signalling pathways associated with little or no change in fetal growth, irrespective of gestational age.Hypoxia at 10% inspired oxygen adversely affected placental phenotype and resulted in severe fetal growth restriction, which was due partly to maternal hypophagia.There is a threshold between 13% and 10% inspired oxygen, corresponding to altitudes of ∼3700 m and 5800 m, respectively, at which the mouse placenta no longer adapts to support fetal resource allocation. This has implications for high altitude human pregnancies.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Blood Glucose
medicine.medical_specialty
Physiology
medicine.medical_treatment
Placenta
Biology
Maternal, Fetal and Neonatal Physiology
Fetal Hypoxia
Second Messenger Systems
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
Vascularity
Insulin-Like Growth Factor II
Pregnancy
Internal medicine
Integrative Physiology
medicine
Animals
Insulin
Hypoxia
Fetus
Fetal Growth Retardation
Growth factor
Hypoxia (medical)
medicine.disease
Phenotype
Adaptation, Physiological
Research Papers
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Oxygen
030104 developmental biology
Endocrinology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Female
medicine.symptom
Research Paper
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14697793
- Volume :
- 594
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of physiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d8f2dfe7d7363375a24d57b3136adc70