During early pregnancy, placentation occurs in a relatively hypoxic environment which is essential for appropriate embryonic development. Intervillous blood flow increases at around 10-12 weeks of gestation and results in exposure of the trophoblast to increased oxygen tension (PO2). Prior to this time, low oxygen appears to prevent trophoblast differentiation towards an invasive phenotype. In other mammalian systems, oxygen tension effects are mediated by hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1). We found that the ontogeny of HIF-1alpha subunit expression during the first trimester of gestation parallels that of transforming growth factor-beta3 (TGFbeta3), an inhibitor of early trophoblast differentiation. Expression of both molecules is high in early pregnancy and falls at around 10 weeks of gestation when placental PO2 levels are believed to increase. Antisense-induced inhibition of HIF-1alpha inhibited the expression of TGFbeta3, and stimulated extravillous trophoblast (EVT) outgrowth and invasion. Of clinical significance we found that TGFbeta3 expression was increased in pre-eclamptic placentae when compared to age-matched controls. Significantly, inhibition of TGFbeta3 by antisense oligonucleotides or antibodies restored the invasive capability to the trophoblast cells in pre-eclamptic explants. We speculate that if oxygen tension fails to increase, or trophoblasts do not detect this increase, HIF-1alpha and TGFbeta3 expression remain high, resulting in shallow trophoblast invasion and predisposing the pregnancy to pre-eclampsia. Effective fetal-maternal interactions during early placentation are critical for a successful pregnancy. Optimal placental perfusion requires the controlled invasion of trophoblast cells deep into the decidua to the spiral arteries. Trophoblast stem cells, also referred to as cytotrophoblast cells, reside in chorionic villi of two types, floating and anchoring villi. Floating villi, which represent the vast majority of chorionic villi, are bathed in maternal blood and primarily perform gas and nutrient exchange for the developing embryo. During early placentation, cytotrophoblast cells in the floating villi proliferate and differentiate by fusing to form the multinucleate syncytiotrophoblast layer. Cytotrophoblast cells in anchoring villi either fuse to form the syncytiotrophoblast layer, or break through the syncytium at selected sites and form multilayered columns of non-polarized extravillous trophoblast cells, which physically connect the embryo to the uterine wall (Figure 1). The extravillous trophoblast cells invade into the uterine wall as far as the first third of the myometrium and its associated spiral arteries, where they disrupt the endothelium and the smooth muscle layer and replace the vascular wall. This results in the conversion of the narrow calibre arteries into distended uteroplacental arteries, thereby increasing blood flow to the placenta and allowing an adequate supply of oxygen and nutrients to the growing fetus. The invasive activity of the extravillous trophoblast cells is at a maximum during the first trimester of gestation, peaking at around 10-12 weeks and declining thereafter. Insufficient invasion contributes to the development of pre-eclampsia, which often results in fetal intrauterine growth restriction, maternal hypertension and proteinuria. In contrast, unrestricted invasion is associated with premalignant conditions, such as invasive mole, and with malignant choriocarcinoma. Invading trophoblast cells undergo striking and rapid changes in cellular functions that are temporally and spatially regulated along the invasive pathway (Figure 1) (Cross, Werb and Fisher, 1994. The formation of the anchoring villi is accompanied by changes in synthesis and degradation of extracellular matrix proteins and their receptors, and changes in the spatial distribution of extracellular matrix proteins, as well as changes in the expression of adhesion molecules (Damsky, Fitzgerald and
[1]
S. Lye,et al.
Activin is a local regulator of human cytotrophoblast cell differentiation.
,
1997,
Endocrinology.
[2]
P. Carmeliet,et al.
Role of HIF-1α in hypoxia-mediated apoptosis, cell proliferation and tumour angiogenesis
,
1998,
Nature.
[3]
J. Lysiak,et al.
Role of Locally Produced Growth Factors in Human Placental Growth and Invasion with Special Reference to Transforming Growth Factors
,
1994
.
[4]
M. Post,et al.
Inhibition of TGF-beta 3 restores the invasive capability of extravillous trophoblasts in preeclamptic pregnancies.
,
1999,
The Journal of clinical investigation.
[5]
G. Semenza,et al.
General involvement of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 in transcriptional response to hypoxia.
,
1993,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[6]
Caroline,et al.
Distribution patterns of extracellular matrix components and adhesion receptors are intricately modulated during first trimester cytotrophoblast differentiation along the invasive pathway, in vivo.
,
1992,
The Journal of clinical investigation.
[7]
S. Lye,et al.
Endoglin regulates trophoblast differentiation along the invasive pathway in human placental villous explants.
,
1997,
Endocrinology.
[8]
J. Irving,et al.
Functional role of cell surface integrins on human trophoblast cell migration: regulation by TGF-beta, IGF-II, and IGFBP-1.
,
1995,
Experimental cell research.
[9]
R. K. Miller,et al.
Villous culture of first trimester human placenta--model to study extravillous trophoblast (EVT) differentiation.
,
1992,
Placenta.
[10]
C. Damsky,et al.
Hypoxia alters early gestation human cytotrophoblast differentiation/invasion in vitro and models the placental defects that occur in preeclampsia.
,
1996,
The Journal of clinical investigation.
[11]
Z. Werb,et al.
Implantation and the placenta: key pieces of the development puzzle.
,
1994,
Science.
[12]
C. Damsky,et al.
Preeclampsia is associated with failure of human cytotrophoblasts to mimic a vascular adhesion phenotype. One cause of defective endovascular invasion in this syndrome?
,
1997,
The Journal of clinical investigation.
[13]
A. Campana,et al.
Localization of alpha 2, alpha 5 and alpha 6 integrin subunits in human endometrium, decidua and trophoblast.
,
1993,
European journal of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology.
[14]
R. Redline,et al.
Pre-eclampsia is associated with an excess of proliferative immature intermediate trophoblast.
,
1995,
Human pathology.
[15]
S. Fisher,et al.
Regulation of human placental development by oxygen tension.
,
1997,
Science.
[16]
C. Graham,et al.
Mechanism of control of trophoblast invasion in situ
,
1991,
Journal of cellular physiology.
[17]
S. Fisher,et al.
Human cytotrophoblast invasion is up-regulated by epidermal growth factor: evidence that paracrine factors modify this process.
,
1994,
Developmental biology.
[18]
W. Wahli,et al.
A Simplified In Situ Hybridization Protocol Using Non-radioactively Labeled Probes to Detect Abundant and Rare mRNAs on Tissue Sections
,
1998
.
[19]
J. S. Hunt,et al.
Localization of transforming growth factor beta and its natural inhibitor decorin in the human placenta and decidua throughout gestation.
,
1995,
Placenta.
[20]
S. Fisher,et al.
Interleukin-1 beta regulates human cytotrophoblast metalloproteinase activity and invasion in vitro.
,
1994,
The Journal of biological chemistry.