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Plastic used in in vitro fertilization procedures induces massive placental gene expression alterations.

Authors :
Kouakou F
Denizot AL
L'Hostis A
Colet J
Jacques S
Sallem A
Ziyyat A
Vaiman D
Wolf JP
Source :
EBioMedicine [EBioMedicine] 2023 May; Vol. 91, pp. 104572. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Apr 23.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: The exposure to plastic derivatives during human life is deleterious. Infants conceived using ART (IVF or ICSI) have twice as many risks of major birth defects compared to naturally conceived infants. Could plastic ware used during ART trigger defects in the fetal development?<br />Methods: Three groups of blastocysts were transferred to pseudopregnant mice. One was obtained after IVF and embryo development in plastic ware, the second in glass ware. The third, was obtained in vivo by natural mating. On day 16.5 of pregnancy, females were sacrificed and fetal organs collected for gene expression analysis. Fetal sex was determined by RT-PCR. RNA was extracted from a pool of five placental or brain samples coming from at least two litters from the same group and analyzed by hybridisation onto the mouse Affymetrix 430.2.0 GeneChips, confirmed by RT-qPCR for 22 genes.<br />Findings: This study highlights a major impact of plastic ware on placental gene expression (1121 significantly deregulated genes), while glassware was much closer to in vivo offspring (only 200 significantly deregulated genes). Gene Ontology indicated that the modified placental genes were mostly involved in stress, inflammation and detoxification. A sex specific analysis revealed in addition a more drastic effect on female than male placentas. In the brains, whatever the comparison, less than 50 genes were found deregulated.<br />Interpretation: Embryos incubated in plastic ware resulted in pregnancy with massive alterations of placental gene expression profile in concerted biological functions. There were no obvious effects on the brains. Besides other effects, this suggests that plastic ware in ART could be a cause of the increased level of pregnancy disorders observed recurrently in ART pregnancies.<br />Funding: This study was funded by two grants from the Agence de la Biomedecine in 2017 and 2019.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of interests None declared.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2352-3964
Volume :
91
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37094466
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104572