1. Extracellular vesicle microRNA in early versus late pregnancy with birth outcomes in the MADRES study
- Author
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Caitlin G Howe, Helen B Foley, Elizabeth M Kennedy, Sandrah P Eckel, Thomas a Chavez, Dema Faham, Brendan H Grubbs, Laila Al-Marayati, Deborah Lerner, Shakira Suglia, Theresa M Bastain, Carmen J Marsit, and Carrie V Breton
- Subjects
mirna ,extracellular vesicles ,pregnancy ,birth outcomes ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Circulating miRNA may contribute to the development of adverse birth outcomes. However, few studies have investigated extracellular vesicle (EV) miRNA, which play important roles in intercellular communication, or compared miRNA at multiple time points in pregnancy. In the current study, 800 miRNA were profiled for EVs from maternal plasma collected in early (median: 12.5 weeks) and late (median: 31.8 weeks) pregnancy from 156 participants in the MADRES Study, a health disparity pregnancy cohort. Associations between miRNA and birth weight, birth weight for gestational age (GA), and GA at birth were examined using covariate-adjusted robust linear regression. Differences by infant sex and maternal BMI were also investigated. Late pregnancy measures of 13 miRNA were associated with GA at birth (PFDR
- Published
- 2022
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