Research Article: Single-cell RNA sequencing of leukocytes at the maternal-fetal interface in physiological and pathological Nodal-deficient pregnancies
Abstract:
Leukocytes at the maternal-fetal interface have critical functions during pregnancy in the prevention of maternal reactivity towards fetal alloantigens, suppression of excess inflammation and promotion of placental angiogenesis. Failed maternal immune adaptations to pregnancy can lead to placental insufficiency and the development of severe reproductive complications. Recent evidence from mouse models has suggested that Nodal, a secreted morphogen of the TGF? superfamily, is an immunoregulator of pregnancy. The absence of Nodal expression in the female reproductive tract (Nodal ?/? ) resulted in the loss of preimplantation regulatory T cells and a 50% implantation failure rate. By mid-gestation, Nodal-deficient pregnancies showed placental dysfunction, fetal loss and intrauterine growth restriction. Therefore, the Nodal ?/? model represents a unique system to study immune-mediated reproductive failure. In this study, single-cell RNA-sequencing was used to characterize leukocytes within the mid-gestational decidua and placenta during physiological and pathological Nodal ?/? pregnancies. Eleven distinct immune cell clusters were identified, with an emphasis on myeloid populations (macrophages and neutrophils). In particular, the transcriptional characterization of placenta-associated maternal macrophages revealed functions consistent with the regulation of angiogenesis, immune suppression and endocytosis. In Nodal ?/? females, the differential abundance and expression profile of these leukocytes reflected the immune dysfunction observed in human reproductive pathologies. Taken together, elucidating roles of leukocytes in placental development provides a basis in the understanding of mechanisms associated with physiological pregnancy and reproductive failures.
Introduction:
Maternal immune adaptations during pregnancy are a critical component of reproductive success as the progression through implantation, placentation and parturition is partially regulated by tissue-resident leukocytes at the maternal-fetal interface. These changes are initiated during the preimplantation period by uterine regulatory T cells (Tregs), which restrict inflammation and establish maternal immunotolerance towards the semi-allogeneic blastocyst ( 1 , 2 ). After implantation, the formation of the interface…
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