4.5 Article

Effect of folic acid on human trophoblast health and function in vitro

Journal

PLACENTA
Volume 37, Issue -, Pages 7-15

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.placenta.2015.11.012

Keywords

Folic acid; Placenta; Trophoblast; Proliferation; Invasion; Apoptosis

Funding

  1. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  2. CIHR Training Program in Reproduction, Early Development, and Impact on Health
  3. Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, University of Ottawa
  4. Canadian Foundation for Innovation Leaders Opportunity Fund [CFI 30306]
  5. Canadian Institute of Health Research [130543 CIA, 17928 CRI, 310560 NUT]
  6. Molly Towell Perinatal Research Foundation
  7. Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa

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Introduction: The combined intake of folic acid (FA) from prenatal multivitamin supplements and fortified foods can result in FA intake values that exceed the tolerable upper intake level (UL). It is unclear what impact FA intake above the UL may have on the feto-placental unit. Our objective was to determine the effects of increasing concentrations of FA on trophoblast health and function in vitro. Methods: Two human placental cell lines [HTR-8/SVneo (n = 5 experiments) and BeWo (n = 5 experiments)] and human placenta tissue explants (n = 6 experiments) were exposed to increasing concentrations of FA (2-2000 ng/mL) for 48-h. Intracellular total folate concentration, trophoblast proliferation, viability, apoptosis, placenta cell invasion and beta-hCG hormone release were assessed. Results: Exposure to increasing FA concentrations resulted in higher intracellular total folate in placental cell lines and tissue explants (p < 0.05); yet, only minimal effects of excess folic acid were observed on the primary indicators of placental health and function studied. Specifically, treatment with excess folic acid (2000 ng/mL) resulted in reduced cellular viability in the villous trophoblast BeWo cell line and increased rates of proliferation in the HT8-8/SVneo extravillous trophoblast cell line (p < 0.05). Further, deficient concentrations of folic acid (2 ng/mL) resulted in decreased cell viability and invasive capabilities of the HTR-8/SVneo extravillous trophoblast cell line (p < 0.05). Discussion: Our results demonstrate that placental health and function may be compromised in conditions of folate deficiency, and not necessarily in conditions of excess FA. This finding supports the recommendation of prenatal folic acid supplementation in the North American population. Further work aimed at clarifying the therapeutic window of FA intake in the obstetrical population is warranted. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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