Galectin-7 Impairs Placentation and Causes Preeclampsia Features in Mice.

Ellen Menkhorst; Wei Zhou; Leilani L Santos; Sarah Delforce; Teresa So; Kate Rainczuk; Hannah Loke; Argyro Syngelaki; Swati Varshney; Nicholas Williamson; Kirsty Pringle; Morag J Young; Kypros H Nicolaides; Yves St-Pierre; Eva Dimitriadis
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a serious pregnancy-induced disorder unique to humans. The etiology of preeclampsia is poorly understood; however, poor placental formation is thought causal. Galectin-7 is produced by trophoblast and is elevated in first-trimester serum of women who subsequently develop preeclampsia. We hypothesized that elevated placental galectin-7 may be causative of preeclampsia. Here, we demonstrated increased galectin-7 production in chorionic villous samples from women who subsequently develop preterm preeclampsia compared with uncomplicated pregnancies. In vitro, galectin-7 impaired human first-trimester trophoblast outgrowth, increased placental production of the antiangiogenic sFlt-1 splice variant, , and reduced placental production and secretion of ADAM12 (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase12) and angiotensinogen. In vivo, galectin-7 administration (E8-E12) to pregnant mice caused elevated systolic blood pressure, albuminuria, impaired placentation (reduced labyrinth vascular branching, impaired decidual spiral artery remodeling, and a proinflammatory placental state demonstrated by elevated IL1β, IL6 and reduced IL10), and dysregulated expression of renin-angiotensin system components in the placenta, decidua, and kidney, including angiotensinogen, prorenin, and the angiotensin II type 1 receptor. Collectively, this study demonstrates that elevated galectin-7 during placental formation contributes to abnormal placentation and suggests that it leads to the development of preeclampsia via altering placental production of sFlt-1 and renin-angiotensin system components. Targeting galectin-7 may be a new treatment option for preeclampsia.sFlt-1-e15a
Journal HYPERTENSION (DALLAS, TEX. : 1979)
ISSN 1524-4563
Published 01 Oct 2020
Volume 76
Issue 4
Pages 1185-1194
DOI 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.120.15313
Type Journal Article
Sponsorship DART: NA