4.6 Article

Mapping the Fetomaternal Peripheral Immune System at Term Pregnancy

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 197, Issue 11, Pages 4482-4492

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601195

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Funding

  1. March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at Stanford
  2. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP 1017093, OPP1113682]
  3. Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine at Stanford University
  4. Stanford Bio-X graduate research fellowship (Stanford, CA)
  5. National Institutes of Health Grant [T32GM007276, 1K23GM111657-02, 5R01AI10012104, U19AI057229, 1U19AI100627]
  6. Child Health Research Institute
  7. Mary L. Johnson Research Fund
  8. Christopher Hess Research Fund
  9. Food and Drug Administration Grant [HHSF223201210194C]

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Preterm labor and infections are the leading causes of neonatal deaths worldwide. During pregnancy, immunological cross talk between the mother and her fetus is critical for the maintenance of pregnancy and the delivery of an immunocompetent neonate. A precise understanding of healthy fetomaternal immunity is the important first step to identifying dysregulated immune mechanisms driving adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes. This study combined single-cell mass cytometry of paired peripheral and umbilical cord blood samples from mothers and their neonates with a graphical approach developed for the visualization of high-dimensional data to provide a high-resolution reference map of the cellular composition and functional organization of the healthy fetal and maternal immune systems at birth. The approach enabled mapping of known phenotypical and functional characteristics of fetal immunity (including the functional hyperresponsiveness of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and the global blunting of innate immune responses). It also allowed discovery of new properties that distinguish the fetal and maternal immune systems. For example, examination of paired samples revealed differences in endogenous signaling tone that are unique to a mother and her offspring, including increased ERK1/2, MAPK-activated protein kinase 2, rpS6, and CREB phosphorylation in fetal Tbet(+)CD4(+) T cells, CD8(+) T cells, B cells, and CD5(lo)CD16(+) NK cells and decreased ERK1/2, MAPK-activated protein kinase 2, and STAT1 phosphorylation in fetal intermediate and nonclassical monocytes. This highly interactive functional map of healthy fetomaternal immunity builds the core reference for a growing data repository that will allow inferring deviations from normal associated with adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes.

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