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Cervical hyaluronan biology in pregnancy, parturition and preterm birth

Journal

MATRIX BIOLOGY
Volume 78-79, Issue -, Pages 24-31

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2018.03.002

Keywords

Hyaluronan; Cervical ripening; Preterm birth; Ascending infection; Parturition; Cervix

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1 P01 HD087150-01A1, HD011149]

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Cervical hyaluronan (HA) synthesis is robustly induced in late pregnancy in numerous species including women and mice. Recent evidence highlights the diverse and dynamic functions of HA in cervical biology that stem from its expression in the cervical stroma, epithelia and immune cells, changes in HA molecular weight and cell specific expression of HA binding partners. Mice deficient in HA in the lower reproductive tract confirm a structural role of HA to increase spacing and disorganization of fibrillar collagen, though this function is not critical for pregnancy and parturition. In addition, cervical HA depletion via targeted deletion of HA synthase genes, disrupts cell signaling required for the differentiation of epithelia and their mucosal and junctional barrier, resulting in increased susceptibility to ascending infection-mediated preterm birth. Finally the generation of HA disaccharides by bacterial hyaluronidases as made by Group B streptococcus can ligate toll like receptors TLR2/4 thus preventing appropriate inflammatory responses as needed to fight ascending infection and preterm birth. This review summarizes our current understanding of HA's novel and unique roles in cervical remodeling in the process of birth. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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