RESUMO
STUDY QUESTION: What is the physiological extent of vascular remodelling in and trophoblast plugging of the uterine circulation across the first half of pregnancy? SUMMARY ANSWER: All levels of the uterine vascular tree (arcuate, radial and spiral arteries (SAs)) dilate â¼2.6- to 4.3-fold between 6 and 20 weeks of gestation, with significant aggregates of trophoblasts persisting in the decidual and myometrial parts of SAs beyond the first trimester. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: In early pregnancy, endovascular trophoblasts form 'plugs' in the SAs, transiently inhibiting blood flow to the placenta, whilst concurrently the uterine vasculature undergoes significant adaption to facilitate increased blood delivery to the placenta later in gestation. These processes are impaired in pregnancy disorders, but quantitative understanding of the anatomical changes even in normal pregnancy is poor. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Serial sections of normal placentae in situ (n = 22) of 6.1-20.5 weeks of gestation from the Boyd collection and Dixon collection (University of Cambridge, UK) were digitalized using a slide scanner or Axio Imager.A1 microscope. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Spiral (n = 45), radial (n = 40) and arcuate (n = 39) arteries were manually segmented. Using custom-written scripts for Matlab® software, artery dimensions (Feret diameters; major axes; luminal/wall area) and endovascular trophoblast plug/aggregate (n = 24) porosities were calculated. Diameters of junctional zone SAs within the myometrium (n = 35) were acquired separately using a micrometre and light microscope. Decidual thickness and trophoblast plug depth was measured using ImageJ. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: By all measures, radial and arcuate artery dimensions progressively increased from 6.1 to 20.5 weeks (P < 0.01). The greatest increase in SA calibre occurred after 12 weeks of gestation. Trophoblast aggregates were found to persist within decidual and myometrial parts of SA lumens beyond the first trimester, and up to 18.5 weeks of gestation, although those present in the second trimester did not appear to prevent the passage of red blood cells to the intervillous space. Trophoblasts forming these aggregates became more compact (decreased in porosity) over gestation, whilst channel size between cells increased (P = 0.01). Decidual thickness decreased linearly over gestation (P = 0.0003), meaning plugs occupied an increasing proportion of the decidua (P = 0.02). LARGE SCALE DATA: N/A. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Although serial sections were assessed, two-dimensional images cannot completely reflect the three-dimensional properties and connectivity of vessels and plugs/aggregates. Immersion-fixation of the specimens means that vessel size may be under-estimated. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: Uterine vascular remodelling and trophoblast plug dispersion is a progressive phenomenon that is not completed by the end of the first trimester. Our quantitative findings support the concept that radial arteries present a major site of resistance until mid-gestation. Their dimensional increase at 10-12 weeks of gestation may explain the rapid increase in blood flow to the placenta observed by others at â¼13 weeks. Measured properties of trophoblast plugs suggest that they will impact on the resistance, shear stress and nature of blood flow within the utero-placental vasculature until mid-gestation. The presence of channels within plugs will likely lead to high velocity flow streams and thus increase shear stress experienced by the trophoblasts forming the aggregates. Quantitative understanding of utero-placental vascular adaptation gained here will improve in silico modelling of utero-placental haemodynamics and provide new insights into pregnancy disorders, such as fetal growth restriction. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This work was supported by a Royal Society Te Aparangi Marsden Grant [18-UOA-135]. A.R.C. is supported by a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship [14-UOA-019]. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.
Assuntos
Circulação Placentária , Trofoblastos , Decídua , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta , Gravidez , Primeiro Trimestre da Gravidez , Remodelação VascularRESUMO
The placenta is a critical fetal exchange organ, with a complex branching tree-like structure. Its surface is covered by a single multinucleated cell, the syncytiotrophoblast, which bathes in maternal blood for most of pregnancy. Mechanosensing protein expression by the syncytiotrophoblast at term suggests that shear stress exerted by maternal blood flow may modulate placental development and function. However, it is not known how the mechanosensitive capacity of the syncytiotrophoblast, or the shear stress it experiences, change across gestation. Here, we show that the syncytiotrophoblast expresses both mechanosensitive ion channels (Piezo 1, Polycystin 2, TRPV6) and motor proteins associated with primary cilia (Dynein 1, IFT88, Kinesin 2), with higher staining for all these proteins seen in late first trimester placentae than at term. MicroCT imaging of placental tissue was then used to inform computational models of blood flow at the placentone scale (using a porous media model), and at the villous scale (using explicit flow simulations). These two models are then linked to produce a combined model that allows the variation of shear stress across both these scales simultaneously. This combined model predicts that the range of shear stress on the syncytiotrophoblast is higher in the first-trimester than at term (0.8 dyne/cm2 median stress compared to 0.04 dyne/cm2) when considering both these scales. Together, this suggests that the nature of blood flow through the intervillous space, and the resulting shear stress on the syncytiotrophoblast have important influences on placental morphogenesis and function from early in pregnancy.
Assuntos
Placenta , Trofoblastos , Gravidez , Feminino , Humanos , Placenta/metabolismo , HemodinâmicaRESUMO
In pregnancy, fetal growth is supported by its placenta. In turn, the placenta is nourished by maternal blood, delivered from the uterus, in which the vasculature is dramatically transformed to deliver this blood an ever increasing volume throughout gestation. A healthy pregnancy is thus dependent on the development of both the placental and maternal circulations, but also the interface where these physically separate circulations come in close proximity to exchange gases and nutrients between mum and baby. As the system continually evolves during pregnancy, our understanding of normal vascular anatomy, and how this impacts placental exchange function is limited. Understanding this is key to improve our ability to understand, predict, and detect pregnancy pathologies, but presents a number of challenges, due to the inaccessibility of the pregnant uterus to invasive measurements, and limitations in the resolution of imaging modalities safe for use in pregnancy. Computational approaches provide an opportunity to gain new insights into normal and abnormal pregnancy, by connecting observed anatomical changes from high-resolution imaging to function, and providing metrics that can be observed by routine clinical ultrasound. Such advanced modeling brings with it challenges to scale detailed anatomical models to reflect organ level function. This suggests pathways for future research to provide models that provide both physiological insights into pregnancy health, but also are simple enough to guide clinical focus. We the review evolution of computational approaches to understanding the physiology and pathophysiology of pregnancy in the uterus, placenta, and beyond focusing on both opportunities and challenges. This article is categorized under: Reproductive System Diseases >Computational Models.