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      Cellular and Molecular Regulation of Spiral Artery Remodelling: Lessons from the Cardiovascular Field

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          Abstract

          A number of important changes take place in the maternal uterine vasculature during the first few weeks of pregnancy resulting in increased blood flow to the intervillous space. Vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells are lost from the spiral arteries and are replaced by fetal trophoblast cells. Failure of the vessels to remodel sufficiently is a common feature of pregnancy pathologies such as early pregnancy loss, intrauterine growth restriction and pre-eclampsia. There is evidence to suggest that some vascular changes occur prior to trophoblast invasion, however, in the absence of trophoblasts remodelling of the spiral arteries is reduced. Until recently our knowledge of these events has been obtained from immunohistochemical studies which, although extremely useful, can give little insight into the mechanisms involved. With the development of more complex in vitro models a picture of events at a cellular and molecular level is beginning to emerge, although some caution is required in extrapolating to the in vivo situation. Trophoblasts synthesise and release a plethora of cytokines and growth factors including members of the tumour necrosis factor family. Studies suggest that these factors may be important in regulating the remodelling process by inducing both endothelial and vascular smooth muscle cell apoptosis. In addition, it is evident from studies in other vascular beds that the structure of the vessel is influenced by factors such as flow, changes in the composition of the extracellular matrix, the phenotype of the vascular cells and the local immune cell environment. It is the aim of this review to present our current knowledge of the mechanisms involved in spiral artery remodelling and explore other possible pathways and cellular interactions that may be involved, informed by studies in the cardiovascular field.

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          Rheological and Physiological Consequences of Conversion of the Maternal Spiral Arteries for Uteroplacental Blood Flow during Human Pregnancy

          Physiological conversion of the maternal spiral arteries is key to a successful human pregnancy. It involves loss of smooth muscle and the elastic lamina from the vessel wall as far as the inner third of the myometrium, and is associated with a 5–10-fold dilation at the vessel mouth. Failure of conversion accompanies common complications of pregnancy, such as early-onset preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction. Here, we model the effects of terminal dilation on inflow of blood into the placental intervillous space at term, using dimensions in the literature derived from three-dimensional reconstructions. We observe that dilation slows the rate of flow from 2 to 3 m/s in the non-dilated part of an artery of 0.4–0.5 mm diameter to approximately 10 cm/s at the 2.5 mm diameter mouth, depending on the exact radius and viscosity. This rate predicts a transit time through the intervillous space of approximately 25 s, which matches observed times closely. The model shows that in the absence of conversion blood will enter the intervillous space as a turbulent jet at rates of 1–2 m/s. We speculate that the high momentum will damage villous architecture, rupturing anchoring villi and creating echogenic cystic lesions as evidenced by ultrasound. The retention of smooth muscle will also increase the risk of spontaneous vasoconstriction and ischaemia–reperfusion injury, generating oxidative stress. Dilation has a surprisingly modest impact on total blood flow, and so we suggest the placental pathology associated with deficient conversion is dominated by rheological consequences rather than chronic hypoxia.
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            The uterine spiral arteries in human pregnancy: facts and controversies.

            Uterine spiral arteries play a vital role in supplying nutrients to the placenta and fetus, and for this purpose they are remodelled into highly dilated vessels by the action of invading trophoblast (physiological change). Knowledge of the mechanisms of these changes is relevant for a better understanding of pre-eclampsia and other pregnancy complications which show incomplete spiral artery remodelling. Controversies still abound concerning different steps in these physiological changes, and several of these disagreements are highlighted in this review, thereby suggesting directions for further research. First, a better definition of the degree of decidua- versus trophoblast-associated remodelling may help to devise a more adequate terminology. Other contestable issues are the vascular plugging and its relation with oxygen, trophoblast invasion from the outside or the inside of the vessels (intravasation versus extravasation), the impact of haemodynamics on endovascular migration, the replacement of arterial components by trophoblast, maternal tissue repair mechanisms and the role of uterine natural killer (NK) cells. Several of these features may be disturbed in complicated pregnancies, including the early decidua-associated vascular remodelling, vascular plugging and haemodynamics. The hyperinflammatory condition of pre-eclampsia may be responsible for vasculopathies such as acute atherosis, although the overall impact of such lesions on placental function is far from clear. Several features of the human placental bed are mirrored by processes in other species with haemochorial placentation, and studying such models may help to illuminate poorly understood aspects of human placentation.
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              Endovascular trophoblast invasion: implications for the pathogenesis of intrauterine growth retardation and preeclampsia.

              Maternal uteroplacental blood flow increases during pregnancy. Altered uteroplacental blood flow is a core predictor of abnormal pregnancy. Normally, the uteroplacental arteries are invaded by endovascular trophoblast and remodeled into dilated, inelastic tubes without maternal vasomotor control. Disturbed remodeling is associated with maintenance of high uteroplacental vascular resistance and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and preeclampsia. Herein, we review routes, mechanisms, and control of endovascular trophoblast invasion. The reviewed data suggest that endovascular trophoblast invasion involves a side route of interstitial invasion. Failure of vascular invasion is preceded by impaired interstitial trophoblast invasion. Extravillous trophoblast synthesis of nitric oxide is discussed in relation to arterial dilation that paves the way for endovascular trophoblast. Moreover, molecular mimicry of invading trophoblast-expressing endothelial adhesion molecules is discussed in relation to replacement of endothelium by trophoblast. Also, maternal uterine endothelial cells actively prepare endovascular invasion by expression of selectins that enable trophoblast to adhere to maternal endothelium. Finally, the mother can prevent endovascular invasion by activated macrophage-induced apoptosis of trophoblast. These data are partially controversial because of methodological restrictions associated with limitations of human tissue investigations and animal studies. Animal models require special care when extrapolating data to the human due to extreme species variations regarding trophoblast invasion. Basal plates of delivered placentas or curettage specimens have been used to describe failure of trophoblast invasion associated with IUGR and preeclampsia; however, they are unsuitable for these kinds of studies, since they do not include the area of pathogenic events, i.e., the placental bed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Placenta
                Placenta
                Placenta
                W.B. Saunders
                0143-4004
                1532-3102
                June 2010
                June 2010
                : 31
                : 6
                : 465-474
                Affiliations
                Developmental and Endocrine Signalling Centre, Division of Basic Medical Sciences, St. George's, University of London, Cranmer Terrace, London, SW17 0RE, UK
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 020 8725 5851; fax: +44 020 8725 2992. g.whitley@ 123456sgul.ac.uk
                Article
                YPLAC2118
                10.1016/j.placenta.2010.03.002
                2882556
                20359743
                0412407b-6843-47e4-8a1e-ae58a5318bb5
                © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.

                This document may be redistributed and reused, subject to certain conditions.

                History
                : 2 March 2010
                Categories
                Current Topic

                Obstetrics & Gynecology
                vascular smooth muscle,pregnancy,apoptosis,trophoblast,remodelling,endothelial,spiral artery,extracellular matrix

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