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Hypoxia
Down-Regulates Placenta Growth Factor, whereas Fetal Growth Restriction
Up-Regulates Placenta Growth Factor Expression: Molecular Evidence for "Placental
Hyperoxia" in Intrauterine Growth Restriction |














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Asud Khaliq,
Caroline Dunk, Jianqiao Jiang, Munjiba Shams, Xiao F. Li, Carmen Acevedo,
Herbert Weich, Martin Whittle, and Asif Ahmed |
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Reproductive
Physiopathology Group, Division of Reproductive & Child Health (AK,
CD, JJ, MS, XFL, CA, MW, AA), University of Birmingham, Birmingham Women\'s
Hospital, Edgbaston, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and Gesellschaft fur Biotechnologische
Forschung, Department of Gene Expression (HW), Braunschweig, Germany |
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Early placental development occurs in an environment of relative hypoxia.
Hypoxia promotes angiogenesis and up-regulates vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF) expression while it down-regulates placenta growth factor
(PlGF) that possess 53% homology with VEGF. Morphological studies show
poor placental vascular development and an increase in the mitotic index
of cytotrophoblasts in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). We hypothesized
that the reported relatively high oxygen level in the intervillous space
in contact with IUGR placental villi will limit angiogenesis by changes
in VEGF and PlGF expression and function. Western immunoblot analysis
demonstrates a diametric expression of PlGF and VEGF proteins throughout
pregnancy with PlGF levels increasing and VEGF levels decreasing, consistent
with placental oxygenation. In IUGR placentae, the ratio of PlGF/GAPDH
mRNA was increased by 2.3-fold (p<0.03) and PlGF protein levels were
also increased, (p<0.05) as compared with gestationally-matched normal
placentae. PlGF mRNA and protein were localized to the trophoblast bilayer
and villous mesenchyme of the human placenta throughout gestation. In
vitro studies demonstrated that increasing oxygen tension (hyperoxia)
up-regulated PIGF protein in term placental villous explants, whereas
hypoxic culture of a term trophoblast choriocarcinoma cell line (BeWo)
down-regulated PIGF mRNA and protein and VEGFR-1 (Flt-1) autophosphorylation.
The addition of PIGF-1 to a spontaneously transformed first trimester
cytotrophoblast cell line stimulated DNA synthesis while PIGF-2 had little
effect. VEGF and PIGF exert their biological actions by means of a common
receptor VEGFR-1. In the first trimester trophoblast cells, PIGF-1 increased
the association of phosphorylated extracellular signal-related kinase
(ERK) with VEGFR-1 immunoprecipitates while both PIGF-1 and PIGF-2 also
potentiated endogenous VEGF mediated association of phosphorylated extracellular
related kinase(ERK) with VEGFR-2 (KDR). More importantly, the addition
of PIGF-1 had little effect while PIGF-2 inhibited cell growth in cultured
endothelial cells derived from human umbilical vein. Nitric oxide (NO)
is reported to promote angiogenesis and PIGF-2 inhibited the basal release
of NO from the first trimester trophoblast. The tissue expression and
functional studies support the hypothesis of "placental hyperoxia"
in early-onset IUGR because hypoxia down-regulates trophoblast PIGF levels,
PIGF expression is increased in IUGR, and PIGF-2 inhibits endothelial
cell growth. Taken together, these changes provide a cellular explanation
for the observed poor angiogenesis in the pathogenesis of IUGR and show
that the two PIGF isoforms may modulate trophoblast and endothelial cell
function differently, possibly through potentiation of VEGF mediated activation
of VEGF-2.
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