Journal of Pregnancy (Jan 2017)

Placental Vitamin D-Binding Protein Expression in Human Idiopathic Fetal Growth Restriction

  • Alice F. Wookey,
  • Tejasvy Chollangi,
  • Hannah E. J. Yong,
  • Bill Kalionis,
  • Shaun P. Brennecke,
  • Padma Murthi,
  • Harry M. Georgiou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/5120267
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2017

Abstract

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Vitamin D-binding protein is a multifunctional serum protein with multiple actions related to normal health. Vitamin D-binding protein transports vitamin D and influences the metabolism of this key hormone but it also has additional immunomodulatory and actin-clearing properties. We investigated whether vitamin D-binding protein expression is altered in fetal growth restriction-associated placental dysfunction. Protein was extracted from 35 placentae derived from 17 healthy control subjects and 18 gestation-matched subjects with fetal growth restriction (FGR). FGR subjects were further subdivided as idiopathic (n=9) and nonidiopathic (n=9). Vitamin D-binding protein and 25(OH) vitamin D were measured by ELISA and normalized to protein concentration. The results showed significantly reduced levels of placental vitamin D-binding protein (control versus FGR, p<0.05, Student’s t-test) that were strongly associated with idiopathic fetal growth restriction (p<0.01, Kruskal-Wallis), whereas levels of vitamin D-binding protein were not associated with placental 25(OH) vitamin D stores (p=0.295, Pearson’s correlation). As such, vitamin D-binding protein may be a factor in unexplained placental dysfunction associated with idiopathic fetal growth restriction and may potentially serve as a biomarker of this disease.