Prenatal exposure to particulate matter and placental gene expression

•Maternal PM2.5 exposure is associated with placental gene expression.•Differentially expressed genes have broad functions including signaling.•Maternal PM2.5 exposure can interact with fetal sex on placental gene expression. While strong evidence supports adverse maternal and offspring consequences...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment international 2022-07, Vol.165, p.107310-107310, Article 107310
Hauptverfasser: Enquobahrie, Daniel A., MacDonald, James, Hussey, Michael, Bammler, Theo K., Loftus, Christine T., Paquette, Alison G., Byington, Nora, Marsit, Carmen J., Szpiro, Adam, Kaufman, Joel D., LeWinn, Kaja Z., Bush, Nicole R., Tylavsky, Frances, Karr, Catherine J., Sathyanarayana, Sheela
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Maternal PM2.5 exposure is associated with placental gene expression.•Differentially expressed genes have broad functions including signaling.•Maternal PM2.5 exposure can interact with fetal sex on placental gene expression. While strong evidence supports adverse maternal and offspring consequences of air pollution, mechanisms that involve the placenta, a key part of the intrauterine environment, are largely unknown. Previous studies of air pollution and placental gene expression were small candidate gene studies that rarely considered prenatal windows of exposure or the potential role of offspring sex. We examined overall and sex-specific associations of prenatal exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with genome-wide placental gene expression. Participants with placenta samples, collected at birth, and childhood health outcomes from CANDLE (Memphis, TN) (n = 776) and GAPPS (Seattle, WA) (n = 205) cohorts of the ECHO-PATHWAYS Consortium were included in this study. PM2.5 exposures during trimesters 1, 2, 3, and the first and last months of pregnancy, were estimated using a spatiotemporal model. Cohort-specific linear adjusted models were fit for each exposure window and expression of >11,000 protein coding genes from paired end RNA sequencing data. Models with interaction terms were used to examine PM2.5-offspring sex interactions. False discovery rate (FDR 
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2022.107310