1. PlGF Immunological Impact during Pregnancy
- Author
-
Chiara Focaccetti, Monica Benvenuto, Roberto Bei, Martino Tony Miele, Loredana Cifaldi, Vittorio Manzari, Federica Limana, and Loredana Albonici
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Placental growth factor ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Placenta ,Inflammation ,Review ,Adaptive Immunity ,Settore MED/04 ,Catalysis ,Immune tolerance ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Flt-1/VEGFR1 ,Inorganic Chemistry ,lcsh:Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Biology ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Spectroscopy ,Placenta Growth Factor ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,immune modulation ,business.industry ,Growth factor ,Organic Chemistry ,Trophoblast ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunity, Innate ,Computer Science Applications ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Settore MED/46 ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,PlGF ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Inflammation Mediators ,business - Abstract
During pregnancy, the mother’s immune system has to tolerate the persistence of paternal alloantigens without affecting the anti-infectious immune response. Consequently, several mechanisms aimed at preventing allograft rejection, occur during a pregnancy. In fact, the early stages of pregnancy are characterized by the correct balance between inflammation and immune tolerance, in which proinflammatory cytokines contribute to both the remodeling of tissues and to neo-angiogenesis, thus, favoring the correct embryo implantation. In addition to the creation of a microenvironment able to support both immunological privilege and angiogenesis, the trophoblast invades normal tissues by sharing the same behavior of invasive tumors. Next, the activation of an immunosuppressive phase, characterized by an increase in the number of regulatory T (Treg) cells prevents excessive inflammation and avoids fetal immuno-mediated rejection. When these changes do not occur or occur incompletely, early pregnancy failure follows. All these events are characterized by an increase in different growth factors and cytokines, among which one of the most important is the angiogenic growth factor, namely placental growth factor (PlGF). PlGF is initially isolated from the human placenta. It is upregulated during both pregnancy and inflammation. In this review, we summarize current knowledge on the immunomodulatory effects of PlGF during pregnancy, warranting that both innate and adaptive immune cells properly support the early events of implantation and placental development. Furthermore, we highlight how an alteration of the immune response, associated with PlGF imbalance, can induce a hypertensive state and lead to the pre-eclampsia (PE).
- Published
- 2020