Feto-placental and coronary endothelial genes implicated in miscarriage, congenital heart disease and stillbirth, a systematic review and meta-analysis

The first trimester placenta is very rarely investigated for placental vascular formation in developmental or diseased contexts. Defects in placental formation can cause heart defects in the fetus, and vice versa. Determining the causality is therefore difficult as both organs develop concurrently a...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Placenta (Eastbourne) 2024-10, Vol.156, p.55-66
Hauptverfasser: Kalisch-Smith, Jacinta I., Ehtisham-Uddin, Nusaybah, Rodriguez-Caro, Helena
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The first trimester placenta is very rarely investigated for placental vascular formation in developmental or diseased contexts. Defects in placental formation can cause heart defects in the fetus, and vice versa. Determining the causality is therefore difficult as both organs develop concurrently and express many of the same genes. Here, we performed a systematic review to determine feto-placental and coronary endothelial genes implicated in miscarriages, stillbirth and congenital heart defects (CHD) from human genome wide screening studies. 4 single cell RNAseq datasets from human first/early second trimester cardiac and placental samples were queried to generate a list of 1187 endothelial genes. This broad list was cross-referenced with genes implicated in the pregnancy disorders above. 39 papers reported feto-placental and cardiac coronary endothelial genes, totalling 612 variants. Vascular gene variants were attributed to the incidence of miscarriage (8 %), CHD (4 %) and stillbirth (3 %). The most common genes for CHD (NOTCH, DST, FBN1, JAG1, CHD4), miscarriage (COL1A1, HERC1), and stillbirth (AKAP9, MYLK), were involved in blood vessel and cardiac valve formation, with roles in endothelial differentiation, angiogenesis, extracellular matrix signaling, growth factor binding and cell adhesion. NOTCH1, AKAP12, CHD4, LAMC1 and SOS1 showed greater relative risk ratios with CHD. Many of the vascular genes identified were expressed highly in both placental and heart EC populations. Both feto-placental and cardiac vascular genes are likely to result in poor endothelial cell development and function during human pregnancy that leads to higher risk of miscarriage, congenital heart disease and stillbirth. •Placental and cardiac vascular endothelial genes are associated with pregnancy-associated conditions.•39 studies reported significant vascular genes for congenital heart defects, miscarriage and stillbirth.•Many genes were expressed in both first trimester and early second trimester coronary and placental endothelial cells.•This data verifies known vascular genes with important roles in endothelial specification and function.•This provides new gene candidates to explore in the miscarriage, congenital heart disease and stillbirth fields.
ISSN:0143-4004
1532-3102
1532-3102
DOI:10.1016/j.placenta.2024.08.015