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Developmentally Delayed Epigenetic Reprogramming Underlying the Pathogenesis of Preeclampsia

Authors :
Wei He
Yuan Wei
Xiaoli Gong
Luyuan Chang
Wan Jin
Ke Liu
Xinghuan Wang
Yu Xiao
Wenjing Zhang
Qiong Chen
Kai Wu
Lili Liang
Jia Liu
Yawen Chen
Huanhuan Guo
Wenhao Chen
Jiexia Yang
Yiming Qi
Wei Dong
Meng Fu
Xiaojuan Li
Jiusi Liu
Yi Zhang
Aihua Yin
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SummaryPreeclampsia, a life-threatening pregnancy complication characterized by hypertension and multiorgan damage, affects 2-5% of pregnancies and causes 76,000 deaths per year. Most preeclampsia associated syndromes immediately dispel after removal of placenta, indicating a casual role of placenta in the pathogenesis. Failed transformation of spiral artery due to insufficient invasion and excessive apoptosis of trophoblast suggested developmental defects in preeclampsia placenta. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms that affected placenta development in preeclampsia remained elusive. Here we show that, in preeclampsia placenta, the epigenetic landscape formed during extraembryonic tissue differentiation was disrupted: dramatic chromatin accessibility shift affected known and novel genes implicated in preeclampsia. DNA methylation defects in preeclampsia affected lineage-defining PcG-controlled loci in trophectoderm. LTR12 retrotransposons associated with VCT/SCT-specific genes were hypermethylated. Meanwhile, hundreds of PcG-regulated EVT-specific gene promoters, which otherwise undergone post-ZGA extraembryonic-tissue-specific de novo methylation, were hypomethylated and hyper-activated. Together, these epigenetic defects resulted in placenta developmental delay in preeclampsia. The defective methylation pattern could be detected in serum cfDNA, and could be used to accurately predict preeclampsia at early pregnancy weeks in independent validation cohorts. Our data suggests that the preeclampsia placenta represents a stalled state of epigenetic reprogramming en route of development from trophectoderm to normal placenta.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....61edb5eb97f987e7e0f76aa1f1057a37
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.08.085290