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Fluid shear stress induces a shift from glycolytic to amino acid pathway in human trophoblasts

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Item Type:Article
Title:Fluid shear stress induces a shift from glycolytic to amino acid pathway in human trophoblasts
Creators Name:Brugger, B.A., Neuper, L., Guettler, J., Forstner, D., Wernitznig, S., Kummer, D., Lyssy, F., Feichtinger, J., Krappinger, J., El-Heliebi, A., Bonstingl, L., Moser, G., Rodriguez-Blanco, G., Bachkönig, O.A., Gottschalk, B., Gruber, M., Nonn, O., Herse, F., Verlohren, S., Frank, H.G., Barapatre, N., Kampfer, C., Fluhr, H., Desoye, G. and Gauster, M.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: The human placenta, a tissue with a lifespan limited to the period of pregnancy, is exposed to varying shear rates by maternal blood perfusion depending on the stage of development. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of fluidic shear stress on the human trophoblast transcriptome and metabolism. RESULTS: Based on a trophoblast cell line cultured in a fluidic flow system, changes caused by shear stress were analyzed and compared to static conditions. RNA sequencing and bioinformatics analysis revealed an altered transcriptome and enriched gene ontology terms associated with amino acid and mitochondrial metabolism. A decreased GLUT1 expression and reduced glucose uptake, together with downregulated expression of key glycolytic rate-limiting enzymes, hexokinase 2 and phosphofructokinase 1 was observed. Altered mitochondrial ATP levels and mass spectrometry data, suggested a shift in energy production from glycolysis towards mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. This shift in energy production could be supported by increased expression of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase variants in response to shear stress as well as under low glucose availability or after silencing of GLUT1. The shift towards amino acid metabolic pathways could be supported by significantly altered amino acid levels, like glutamic acid, cysteine and serine. Downregulation of GLUT1 and glycolytic rate-limiting enzymes, with concomitant upregulation of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase 2 was confirmed in first trimester placental explants cultured under fluidic flow. In contrast, high fluid shear stress decreased glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase 2 expression in term placental explants when compared to low flow rates. Placental tissue from pregnancies with intrauterine growth restriction are exposed to high shear rates and showed also decreased glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase 2, while GLUT1 was unchanged and glycolytic rate-limiting enzymes showed a trend to be upregulated. The results were generated by using qPCR, immunoblots, quantification of immunofluorescent pictures, padlock probe hybridization, mass spectrometry and FRET-based measurement. CONCLUSION: Our study suggests that onset of uteroplacental blood flow is accompanied by a shift from a predominant glycolytic- to an alternative amino acid converting metabolism in the villous trophoblast. Rheological changes with excessive fluidic shear stress at the placental surface, may disrupt this alternative amino acid pathway in the syncytiotrophoblast and could contribute to intrauterine growth restriction.
Keywords:Placenta Development, Fluidic Shear Stress, Trophoblast Metabolism
Source:Cell and Bioscience
ISSN:2045-3701
Publisher:BioMed Central
Volume:13
Number:1
Page Range:163
Date:8 September 2023
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13578-023-01114-3
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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