Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Circulating extracellular vesicular microRNA signatures in early gestation show an association with subsequent clinical features of pre-eclampsia

  • Shubhamoy Ghosh,
  • Shanthie Thamotharan,
  • Jeanette Fong,
  • Margarida Y. Y. Lei,
  • Carla Janzen,
  • Sherin U. Devaskar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-64057-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract In a prospective cohort of subjects who subsequently developed preeclampsia (PE, n = 14) versus remaining healthy (NORM, n = 12), early gestation circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs) containing a panel of microRNA signatures were characterized and their biological networks of targets deciphered. Multiple microRNAs of which some arose from the placenta (19MC and 14MC) demonstrated changes in association with advancing gestation, while others expressed were pathognomonic of the subsequent development of characteristic clinical features of PE which set in as a late-onset subtype. This panel of miRNAs demonstrated a predictability with an area under the curve of 0.96 using leave-one-out cross-validation training in a logistic regression model with elastic-net regularization and precautions against overfitting. In addition, this panel of miRNAs, some of which were previously detected in either placental tissue or as maternal cell-free non-coding transcripts, lent further validation to our EV studies and the observed association with PE. Further, the identified biological networks of targets of these detected miRNAs revealed biological functions related to vascular remodeling, cellular proliferation, growth, VEGF, EGF and the PIP3/Akt signaling pathways, all mediating key cellular functions. We conclude that we have demonstrated a proof-of-principle by detecting a panel of EV packaged miRNAs in the maternal circulation early in gestation with possibilities of biological function in the placenta and other maternal tissues, along with the probability of predicting the subsequent clinical appearance of PE, particularly the late-onset subtype.