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Sex-dependent regulation of placental oleic acid and palmitic acid metabolism by maternal glycemia and associations with birthweight.

Sex-dependent regulation of placental oleic acid and palmitic acid metabolism by maternal glycemia and associations with birthweight.
Sex-dependent regulation of placental oleic acid and palmitic acid metabolism by maternal glycemia and associations with birthweight.

Pregnancy complications such as maternal hyperglycemia increase perinatal mortality and morbidity, but risks are higher in males than in females. We hypothesized that fetal sex-dependent differences in placental palmitic-acid (PA) and oleic-acid (OA) metabolism influence such risks. Placental explants (n = 22) were incubated with isotope-labeled fatty acids ( 13C-PA or 13C-OA) for 24 or 48 h and the production of forty-seven 13C-PA lipids and thirty-seven 13C-OA lipids quantified by LCMS. Linear regression was used to investigate associations between maternal glycemia, BMI and fetal sex with 13C lipids, and between 13C lipids and birthweight centile. Placental explants from females showed greater incorporation of 13C-OA and 13C-PA into almost all lipids compared to males. Fetal sex also influenced relationships with maternal glycemia, with many 13C-OA and 13C-PA acylcarnitines, 13C-PA-diacylglycerols and 13C-PA phospholipids positively associated with glycemia in females but not in males. In contrast, several 13C-OA triacylglycerols and 13C-OA phospholipids were negatively associated with glycemia in males but not in females. Birthweight centile in females was positively associated with six 13C-PA and three 13C-OA lipids (mainly acylcarnitines) and was negatively associated with eight 13C-OA lipids, while males showed few associations. Fetal sex thus influences placental lipid metabolism and could be a key modulator of the impact of maternal metabolic health on perinatal outcomes, potentially contributing toward sex-specific adaptions in which females prioritize survival.

diabetes, fatty acid, fetal growth, fetal sex, lipids, placenta, β-oxidation
1422-0067
Watkins, Oliver C.
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Young, Hannah E.J.
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Mah, Tania Ken Lin
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Cracknell, Victoria Kathryn Bonnell
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Pillai, Reshma Appukuttan
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Selvam, Preben
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Sharma, Neha
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Cazenave-Gassiot, Amaury
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Bendt, Anne K.
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Godfrey, Keith
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Lewis, Rohan
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Wenk, Markus R.
d1ba356f-b0ed-4318-886a-c8f929679060
Chan, Shiao-Yng
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Watkins, Oliver C.
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Young, Hannah E.J.
71783e38-da16-41cf-8947-c2d462844bf0
Mah, Tania Ken Lin
0f6f5453-2f22-47d5-90c5-de52da0a5781
Cracknell, Victoria Kathryn Bonnell
3a73f405-4c9f-41c9-83a7-2d49ef0f0313
Pillai, Reshma Appukuttan
c6a8a2d9-eaa1-4963-8c2c-5aed5d7e0503
Selvam, Preben
989ffd8a-e214-43b5-a3ce-a814fc491ee7
Sharma, Neha
c5c663b2-86e4-4e3c-8f56-c28351419587
Cazenave-Gassiot, Amaury
f53d5438-9fad-4fd6-98f9-3e289205dcd7
Bendt, Anne K.
3a269eb1-2755-4020-a6a1-12100ae89bd4
Godfrey, Keith
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Lewis, Rohan
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Wenk, Markus R.
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Chan, Shiao-Yng
3c9d8970-2cc4-430a-86a7-96f6029a5293

Watkins, Oliver C., Young, Hannah E.J., Mah, Tania Ken Lin, Cracknell, Victoria Kathryn Bonnell, Pillai, Reshma Appukuttan, Selvam, Preben, Sharma, Neha, Cazenave-Gassiot, Amaury, Bendt, Anne K., Godfrey, Keith, Lewis, Rohan, Wenk, Markus R. and Chan, Shiao-Yng (2022) Sex-dependent regulation of placental oleic acid and palmitic acid metabolism by maternal glycemia and associations with birthweight. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23 (15), [8685]. (doi:10.3390/ijms23158685).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Pregnancy complications such as maternal hyperglycemia increase perinatal mortality and morbidity, but risks are higher in males than in females. We hypothesized that fetal sex-dependent differences in placental palmitic-acid (PA) and oleic-acid (OA) metabolism influence such risks. Placental explants (n = 22) were incubated with isotope-labeled fatty acids ( 13C-PA or 13C-OA) for 24 or 48 h and the production of forty-seven 13C-PA lipids and thirty-seven 13C-OA lipids quantified by LCMS. Linear regression was used to investigate associations between maternal glycemia, BMI and fetal sex with 13C lipids, and between 13C lipids and birthweight centile. Placental explants from females showed greater incorporation of 13C-OA and 13C-PA into almost all lipids compared to males. Fetal sex also influenced relationships with maternal glycemia, with many 13C-OA and 13C-PA acylcarnitines, 13C-PA-diacylglycerols and 13C-PA phospholipids positively associated with glycemia in females but not in males. In contrast, several 13C-OA triacylglycerols and 13C-OA phospholipids were negatively associated with glycemia in males but not in females. Birthweight centile in females was positively associated with six 13C-PA and three 13C-OA lipids (mainly acylcarnitines) and was negatively associated with eight 13C-OA lipids, while males showed few associations. Fetal sex thus influences placental lipid metabolism and could be a key modulator of the impact of maternal metabolic health on perinatal outcomes, potentially contributing toward sex-specific adaptions in which females prioritize survival.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 July 2022
Published date: 4 August 2022
Keywords: diabetes, fatty acid, fetal growth, fetal sex, lipids, placenta, β-oxidation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 472323
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472323
ISSN: 1422-0067
PURE UUID: 3397a782-76b7-45d2-91c9-610c07266f81
ORCID for Keith Godfrey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4643-0618
ORCID for Rohan Lewis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4044-9104

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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2022 17:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Oliver C. Watkins
Author: Hannah E.J. Young
Author: Tania Ken Lin Mah
Author: Victoria Kathryn Bonnell Cracknell
Author: Reshma Appukuttan Pillai
Author: Preben Selvam
Author: Neha Sharma
Author: Amaury Cazenave-Gassiot
Author: Anne K. Bendt
Author: Keith Godfrey ORCID iD
Author: Rohan Lewis ORCID iD
Author: Markus R. Wenk
Author: Shiao-Yng Chan

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