Blastocyst-Derived Stem Cell Populations under Stress: Impact of Nutrition and Metabolism on Stem Cell Potency Loss and Miscarriage

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 13 - Trang 454-464 - 2017
Yu Yang1,2, Alan Bolnick1, Alexandra Shamir3, Mohammed Abdulhasan1, Quanwen Li1,4, G. C. Parker4,5, Elizabeth E. Puscheck1, D. A. Rappolee1,2,4,6
1CS Mott Center for Human Growth and Development, Department of Ob/Gyn, Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, USA
2Program for Reproductive Sciences and Department of Physiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, USA
3University of Utah, Salt Lake City, (USA)
4Institutes for Environmental Health Science, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, USA
5Department of Pediatrics and Children’s Hospital of Michigan, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, USA
6Department of Biology, University of Windsor, Windsor, Canada

Tóm tắt

Data from in vitro and in vivo models suggest that malnutrition and stress trigger adaptive responses, leading to small for gestational age (SGA) blastocysts with fewer cell numbers. These stress responses are initially adaptive, but become maladaptive with increasing stress exposures. The common stress responses of the blastocyst-derived stem cells, pluripotent embryonic and multipotent placental trophoblast stem cells (ESCs and TSCs), are decreased growth and potency, and increased, imbalanced and irreversible differentiation. SGA embryos may fail to produce sufficient antiluteolytic placental hormone to maintain corpus luteum progesterone secretion that provides nutrition at the implantation site. Myriad stress inputs for the stem cells in the embryo can occur in vitro during in vitro fertilization/assisted reproductive technology (IVF/ART) or in vivo. Paradoxically, stresses that diminish stem cell growth lead to a higher level of differentiation simultaneously which further decreases ESC or TSC numbers in an attempt to functionally compensate for fewer cells. In addition, prolonged or strong stress can cause irreversible differentiation. Resultant stem cell depletion is proposed as a cause of miscarriage via a “quiet” death of an ostensibly adaptive response of stem cells instead of a reactive, violent loss of stem cells or their differentiated progenies.

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