Congenital heart defects caused by problems with placenta
2024-11-26
(Press-News.org) Congenital heart defects are the most common form of human birth defect, but we still don’t fully understand what causes them. Previous research had suggested that some heart defects could be triggered by problems with the placenta, the organ that provides oxygen and nutrients to the developing embryo. Now, researchers at Nanjing University, China have confirmed this link by focusing on a protein whose levels are reduced in many patients with congenital heart defects, called SLC25A1. SLC25A1 plays a key role in transporting citric acid, an important metabolite whose derivatives can affect gene expression, to different regions of our cells. However, it was unclear how the protein’s loss might be linked to congenital heart defects. By disrupting this protein in different tissues in developing mice, the researchers have shown that loss of SLC25A1 does not affect the developing heart directly. Instead, it leads to problems with placental growth and this, in turn, causes heart defects in the mice. The researchers publish their study in the journal Development on 26 November 2024.
The researchers used gene editing tools to produce mouse embryos that completely lack the SLC25A1 protein. As expected, these embryos developed heart defects. However, they also had problems with their placentas, which were thinner than usual. “A rapidly increasing number of studies in mice have suggested that the placenta is involved in the regulation of embryonic heart development,” explained Professor Zhongzhou Yang from Nanjing University Medical School, whose research group carried out the study. “However, the molecular basis of this relationship was unclear.”
The research team wanted to explore this potential relationship between placental defects and heart defects. To identify where in the embryo the protein is needed, they decided to remove SLC25A1 from specific tissues, rather than just disrupting it across the whole embryo. First, they made mouse embryos that lacked the SLC25A1 protein only in their developing heart. Surprisingly, these mice did not develop heart defects, suggesting that SLC25A1 is not playing an important role in heart cells. In contrast, when the researchers generated mice that lacked the SLC25A1 protein only in their placental tissue, they found that the mice developed both placental defects and heart defects. This suggested that SLC25A1 plays a key role in development of the placenta and, if placental development goes wrong, heart defects can occur as a result. Indeed, measurements showed that loss of SLC25A1 alters the citric acid balance in placental cells, resulting in changes to the cells’ DNA that disrupt placental development.
The researchers next explored how these changes to the placenta might cause problems with heart development. They found that the placentas lacking SLC25A1 had low levels of PSG1, a protein that is produced by the placental cells and is known to help regulate development of endothelia (sheets of cells that line the insides of certain structures in the body, including blood vessels). “We showed that administration of human PSG1 to pregnant mice improves placental and heart defects in embryos lacking SLC25A1,” Professor Yang explains. “PSG1 might therefore become a potentially effective drug to help improve placental and heart development of the foetus in the uterus.” While further work is needed, these findings could lead to the development of a new treatment strategy to prevent congenital heart defects in foetuses that are exhibiting placental problems.
###
IF REPORTING THIS STORY, PLEASE MENTION DEVELOPMENT AS THE SOURCE AND, IF REPORTING ONLINE, PLEASE CARRY A LINK TO: https://journals.biologists.com/dev/article-lookup/DOI/10.1242/dev.204290
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Zhongzhou Yang, PhD, is a Professor at Nanjing University Medical School, China.
REFERENCE: Fan, W., Li, Z., He, X., Wang, X., Sun, M., Yang, Z. (2024). SLC25A1 regulates placental development to ensure embryonic heart morphogenesis. Development, 151, dev204290. doi: 10.1242/dev.204290
The story is COPYRIGHTED. Therefore, advance permission is required before any and every reproduction of each article in full. Please contact: permissions@biologists.com.
For further information, contact laura.hankins@biologists.com
THIS ARTICLE IS EMBARGOED UNTIL Tuesday, 26th November 2024, 17:00 HRS EST (22:00 HRS GMT)
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-11-26
Chelsey Schlechter, MPH, PhD, Huntsman Cancer Institute investigator and assistant professor in the Department of Population Health Sciences at the University of Utah (the U), has been selected as a Cancer Moonshot Scholar.
Schlechter is one of only eleven researchers in the U.S. chosen for the prestigious program this year, which aims to both advance impactful cancer research and broaden the research workforce.
For the project, Schlechter and her team partnered with the Association for Utah Community Health and Utah Community Health Centers—organizations which ...
2024-11-26
A new study led by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill offers a solution to water scarcity during droughts amid the tug of economic development, population growth and climate uncertainty for water users in Western U.S. states. The proposed two-way leasing contracts would coordinate agricultural-to-urban leasing during periods of drought and urban-to-agricultural leasing during wet periods, benefiting both urban and agricultural water users.
“Water markets are an important tool for allocating water in the Western U.S., and other water-scarce regions around the world, but they are often slow to respond to drought, ...
2024-11-26
Alexandria, VA, USA - The Journal of Dental Research (JDR) has announced the publication of a new issue of Advances in Dental Research, a supplement to the Journal of Dental Research (JDR), entitled, "Women in Dental, Clinical, and Translational Research.”
The 2024 Annual Meeting of the American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) and the Canadian Association for Dental Research featured a two-day “Meeting Within a Meeting” on the topic of “Women in Dental, Clinical, and Translational Research” organized by AADOCR Then- President Alexandre Vieira. During these sessions, speakers were challenged to reflect on ...
2024-11-26
Team Unlocks New Insights on Pulsar Signals
November 26, 2024, Mountain View, CA – Dr. Sofia Sheikh from the SETI Institute led a study that sheds new light on how pulsar signals—the spinning remnants of massive stars—distort as they travel through space. This study, published in The Astrophysical Journal, was performed by a multi-year cohort of undergraduate researchers in the Penn State branch of the Pulsar Search Collaboratory student club. Maura McLaughlin, Chair, Eberly Distinguished Professor of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University, created the Pulsar Search Collaboratory to engage ...
2024-11-26
Great apes track events with their eyes in the same way that humans do, according to a study published November 26th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Vanessa Wilson from the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland, and colleagues.
When watching a cat chase a mouse, humans will alternate looking at cat and mouse, using the information to connect the two into what’s called an agent-patient relationship—with the cat as the agent and the mouse as the patient. This cognitive mechanism is thought to be ...
2024-11-26
Routine screening to detect risk factors for heart disease dropped sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic in England, and some key measurements, such as blood pressure readings, may still lag behind pre-pandemic levels. These findings are reported in a new study by Frederick Ho and Naveed Sattar of the University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK, and colleagues published November 26th in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, patients went without routine face-to-face health checks, which are important for detecting common cardiometabolic ...
2024-11-26
While NASA’s NEOWISE telescope ended its journey through space on Nov. 1, 2024, the team at IPAC, a science center at Caltech, was working on one further gift from the prolific mission.
The final data release from NEOWISE was released to the astronomy community just two weeks later, on Nov. 14, encompassing over 26 million images and nearly 200 billion sources detected by the telescope. And today, IPAC is releasing six new images from the mission’s archival data as a tribute to this landmark project, available here: https://www.astropix.org/link/3b2x
NEOWISE ...
2024-11-26
"Research in the last several decades has established endothelial cells (ECs) as a dynamic interface critical for vascular protection.”
BUFFALO, NY- November 26, 2024 – This editorial was published by Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) in Volume 16, Issue 17, titled, “The silent protector: Nucleoporin93’s role in vascular health.”
Written by Julia Michalkiewicz, Tung D. Nguyen, and Monica Y. Lee from The University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, ...
2024-11-26
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26, 2024 – Human activities are causing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels to rise, which increases the global average surface temperature—and poses a threat to crop growth. Escalating concerns about climate change’s impact on global food security inspired researchers from Banaras Hindu University in India to create a way to explore how these factors influence crop yields.
In Chaos, from AIP Publishing, the researchers share a mathematical model created to capture the nonlinear relationships between CO2, temperature, human population, ...
2024-11-26
About The Study: This cohort study among individuals participating in a weight loss program found that nearly half of those consuming alcohol at baseline decreased their alcohol use after anti-obesity medication initiation. There may be properties of anti-obesity medications that lead to reduced use. For example, naltrexone decreases cravings for alcohol and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) may attenuate the rewarding effects of alcohol, similar to food.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Lisa R. Miller-Matero, PhD, email lmatero1@hfhs.org.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Congenital heart defects caused by problems with placenta