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High-throughput mRNA sequencing of human placenta shows sex differences across gestation.

Authors :
Flowers AE
Gonzalez TL
Wang Y
Santiskulvong C
Clark EL
Novoa A
Jefferies CA
Lawrenson K
Chan JL
Joshi NV
Zhu Y
Tseng HR
Wang ET
Ishimori M
Karumanchi SA
Williams J 3rd
Pisarska MD
Source :
Placenta [Placenta] 2024 May; Vol. 150, pp. 8-21. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 21.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: Fetal sex affects fetal and maternal health outcomes in pregnancy, but this connection remains poorly understood. As the placenta is the route of fetomaternal communication and derives from the fetal genome, placental gene expression sex differences may explain these outcomes.<br />Objectives: We utilized next generation sequencing to study the normal human placenta in both sexes in first and third trimester to generate a normative transcriptome based on sex and gestation.<br />Study Design: We analyzed 124 first trimester (T1, 59 female and 65 male) and 43 third trimester (T3, 18 female and 25 male) samples for sex differences within each trimester and sex-specific gestational differences.<br />Results: Placenta shows more significant sexual dimorphism in T1, with 94 T1 and 26 T3 differentially expressed genes (DEGs). The sex chromosomes contributed 60.6% of DEGs in T1 and 80.8% of DEGs in T3, excluding X/Y pseudoautosomal regions. There were 6 DEGs from the pseudoautosomal regions, only significant in T1 and all upregulated in males. The distribution of DEGs on the X chromosome suggests genes on Xp (the short arm) may be particularly important in placental sex differences. Dosage compensation analysis of X/Y homolog genes shows expression is primarily contributed by the X chromosome. In sex-specific analyses of first versus third trimester, there were 2815 DEGs common to both sexes upregulated in T1, and 3263 common DEGs upregulated in T3. There were 7 female-exclusive DEGs upregulated in T1, 15 female-exclusive DEGs upregulated in T3, 10 male-exclusive DEGs upregulated in T1, and 20 male-exclusive DEGs upregulated in T3.<br />Discussion: This is the largest cohort of placentas across gestation from healthy pregnancies defining the normative sex dimorphic gene expression and sex common, sex specific and sex exclusive gene expression across gestation. The first trimester has the most sexually dimorphic transcripts, and the majority were upregulated in females compared to males in both trimesters. The short arm of the X chromosome and the pseudoautosomal region is particularly critical in defining sex differences in the first trimester placenta. As pregnancy is a dynamic state, sex specific DEGs across gestation may contribute to sex dimorphic changes in overall outcomes.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors report no conflict of interest<br /> (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-3102
Volume :
150
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Placenta
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38537412
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.placenta.2024.03.005