Cells (Dec 2022)

Cross-Generational Impact of Innate Immune Memory Following Pregnancy Complications

  • Nakeisha A. Lodge-Tulloch,
  • Alexa J. Toews,
  • Aline Atallah,
  • Tiziana Cotechini,
  • Sylvie Girard,
  • Charles H. Graham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11233935
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 23
p. 3935

Abstract

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Pregnancy complications can have long-term negative effects on the health of the affected mothers and their children. In this review, we highlight the underlying inflammatory etiologies of common pregnancy complications and discuss how aberrant inflammation may lead to the acquisition of innate immune memory. The latter can be described as a functional epigenetic reprogramming of innate immune cells following an initial exposure to an inflammatory stimulus, ultimately resulting in an altered response following re-exposure to a similar inflammatory stimulus. We propose that aberrant maternal inflammation associated with complications of pregnancy increases the cross-generational risk of developing noncommunicable diseases (i.e., pregnancy complications, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic disease) through a process mediated by innate immune memory. Elucidating a role for innate immune memory in the cross-generational health consequences of pregnancy complications may lead to the development of novel strategies aimed at reducing the long-term risk of disease.

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