Frontiers in Immunology (May 2021)

Dysfunction of Decidual Macrophages Is a Potential Risk Factor in the Occurrence of Preeclampsia

  • Miaomiao Rong,
  • Xingyu Yan,
  • Hongya Zhang,
  • Chan Zhou,
  • Cong Zhang,
  • Cong Zhang,
  • Cong Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.655655
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Preeclampsia is a multi-factorial and multi-genetic disorder that affects more than eight million mother and baby pairs each year. Currently, most of the attention to the pathogenesis of preeclampsia has been focused on placenta, but recent progresses suggest that excellent decidualization lays foundation for placentation and growth. Moreover, preeclampsia is associated with an imbalance in immunoregulatory mechanisms, however, how the immune regulatory system in the decidua affects preeclampsia is still unclear. In our study, after intersecting the genes of differentially expressed between preeclampsia and the control gotten by conventional expression profile analysis and the genes contained in the ligand receptor network, we found eight differentially expressed genes in a ligand-receptor relationship, and the eight genes have a characteristic: most of them participate in the interaction between decidual macrophages and other decidual immune cells. The results of single-cell sequencing of decidual cells further demonstrated that decidual macrophages affect the functions of other immune cells through export. As a result, abnormal gene expression affects the export function of decidual macrophages, which in turn affects the interaction of decidual macrophages with other immune cells, thereby destroying the original immune regulation mechanism, and ultimately leading to the occurrence of preeclampsia.

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