4.5 Article

Differential Placental Gene Expression in Severe Preeclampsia

Journal

PLACENTA
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 424-433

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.placenta.2009.01.012

Keywords

Gene expression; Microarrays; Placenta; Severe preeclampsia

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We investigated the global placental gene expression profile in severe preeclampsia. Twenty-one women were randomly selected from 50 participants with uncomplicated pregnancies to match 21 patients with severe preeclampsia. A 30 K Human Genome Survey Microarray v.2.0 (Applied Biosystems) was used to evaluate the gene expression profile. After RNA isolation, five preeclamptic placentas were excluded due to poor RNA quality. The series composed of 37 hybridizations in a one-channel detection system of chemiluminescence emitted by the microarrays. An empirical Bayes analysis was applied to find differentially expressed genes. In preeclamptic placentas 213 genes were significantly (fold-change >= 2 and p <= 0.01) up-regulated and 82 were down-regulated, compared with normal placentas. Leptin (40 fold), laeverin (10 fold), different isoforms of beta-hCG (3-6 fold), endoglin (4 fold), FLT1 (3 fold) and FLT4 (2 fold) were up-regulated. PDGFD was down-regulated (2 fold). Several differentially expressed genes were associated with Alzheimer disease, angiogenesis, Notch-, TGF beta- and VEGF-signalling pathways. Sixteen genes best discriminated preeclamptic from normal placentas. Comparison between early- (<34 weeks) and late-onset preeclampsia showed 168 differentially expressed genes with oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelin signalling pathways mainly involved in early-onset disease. Validation of the microarray results was performed by RT-PCR, quantitative urine hCG measurement and placental histopathologic examination. In summary, placental gene expression is altered in preeclampsia and we provide a comprehensive list of the differentially expressed genes. Placental gene expression is different between early- and late-onset preeclampsia. suggesting differences in pathophysiology. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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