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7 June 2019 Preeclampsia may influence offspring neuroanatomy and cognitive function: a role for placental growth factor
Vanessa R. Kay, Matthew T. Rätsep, Ernesto A. Figueiró-Filho, B. Anne Croy
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Preeclampsia (PE) is a common pregnancy complication affecting 3–5% of women. Preeclampsia is diagnosed clinically as new-onset hypertension with associated end organ damage after 20 weeks of gestation. Despite being diagnosed as a maternal syndrome, fetal experience of PE is a developmental insult with lifelong cognitive consequences. These cognitive alterations are associated with distorted neuroanatomy and cerebrovasculature, including a higher risk of stroke. The pathophysiology of a PE pregnancy is complex, with many factors potentially able to affect fetal development. Deficient pro-angiogenic factor expression is one aspect that may impair fetal vascularization, alter brain structure, and affect future cognition. Of the pro-angiogenic growth factors, placental growth factor (PGF) is strongly linked to PE. Concentrations of PGF are inappropriately low in maternal blood both before and during a PE gestation. Fetal concentrations of PGF appear to mirror maternal circulating concentrations. Using Pgf-/- mice that may model effects of PE on offspring, we demonstrated altered central nervous system vascularization, neuroanatomy, and behavior. Overall, we propose that development of the fetal brain is impaired in PE, making the offspring of preeclamptic pregnancies a unique cohort with greater risk of altered cognition and cerebrovasculature. These individuals may benefit from early interventions, either pharmacological or environmental. The early neonatal period may be a promising window for intervention while the developing brain retains plasticity.

Summary Sentence

Offspring of preeclamptic pregnancies have unique brains with evidence from an angiokinedeficient mouse model suggesting a role for PGF.

© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com
Vanessa R. Kay, Matthew T. Rätsep, Ernesto A. Figueiró-Filho, and B. Anne Croy "Preeclampsia may influence offspring neuroanatomy and cognitive function: a role for placental growth factor," Biology of Reproduction 101(2), 271-283, (7 June 2019). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioz095
Received: 21 December 2018; Accepted: 6 June 2019; Published: 7 June 2019
KEYWORDS
behavior
brain
cerebrovasculature
developmental origins of health and disease
preeclampsia
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