4.5 Article

Adverse placental effects of valproic acid: Studies in perfused human placentas

Journal

EPILEPSIA
Volume 59, Issue 5, Pages 993-1003

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/epi.14078

Keywords

antiepileptic drugs; folic acid; GLUT1; pregnancy; teratogenicity

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [506/13]

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ObjectiveIn utero exposure to valproic acid (VPA) has been associated with worse pregnancy outcomes compared to all other antiepileptic drugs. We have previously shown that VPA alters the expression of placental transporters for hormones and nutrients invitro and in pregnant mice. Here, our aim was to characterize the effects of short exposure to VPA on the expression of carriers for compounds essential for fetal development in human placentas exvivo, under controlled conditions. MethodsPlacentas were obtained from cesarean deliveries of women with no known epilepsy. Cotyledons were cannulated and perfused in the absence or the presence of VPA (42, 83, or 166g/mL; n=6/group) in the maternal perfusate over 180minutes. A customized gene panel array was used to analyze the expression of carrier genes in the perfused cotyledons. We additionally measured in the perfused placentas folic acid concentrations and histone acetylation. ResultsVPA significantly altered the mRNA levels of major carriers for folic acid, glucose, choline, thyroid hormones, and serotonin (P<.05) and reduced placental folate concentrations by 25%-35% (P=.059). The effects were observed at therapeutic concentrations sufficient to enhance placental histone acetylation, and some were concentration-dependent. SignificanceOur results point to the placenta as a novel target of VPA, implying potential involvement of the placenta in VPA's adverse fetal outcomes.

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