45 research outputs found

    Discriminative imaging of maternal and fetal blood flow within the placenta using ultrafast ultrasound

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    Remerciements Ă  INRA UCEA et CR2iInternational audienceBeing able to map accurately placental blood flow in clinics could have major implications in the diagnosis and follow-up of pregnancy complications such as intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Moreover, the impact of such an imaging modality for a better diagnosis of placental dysfunction would require to solve the unsolved problem of discriminating the strongly intricated maternal and fetal vascular networks. However, no current imaging modality allows both to achieve sufficient sensitivity and selectivity to tell these entangled flows apart. Although ultrasound imaging would be the clinical modality of choice for such a problem, conventional Doppler echography both lacks of sensibility to detect and map the placenta microvascularization and a concept to discriminate both entangled flows. In this work, we propose to use an ultrafast Doppler imaging approach both to map with an enhanced sensitivity the small vessels of the placenta (~100 Όm) and to assess the variation of the Doppler frequency simultaneously in all pixels of the image within a cardiac cycle. This approach is evaluated in vivo in the placenta of pregnant rabbits: By studying the local flow pulsatility pixel per pixel, it becomes possible to separate maternal and fetal blood in 2D from their pulsatile behavior. Significance Statement: The in vivo ability to image and discriminate maternal and fetal blood flow within the placenta is an unsolved problem which could improve the diagnosis of pregnancy complications such as intrauterine growth restriction or preeclampsia. To date, no imaging modality has both sufficient sensitivity and selectivity to discriminate these intimately entangled flows. We demonstrate that Ultrafast Doppler ultrasound method with a frame rate 100x faster than conventional imaging solves this issue. It permits the mapping of small vessels of the placenta (~100 Όm) in 2D with an enhanced sensitivity. By assessing pixel-per-pixel pulsatility within single cardiac cycles, it achieves maternal and fetal blood flow discrimination

    Etude des flux sanguins dans le placenta humain et influence du shear stress sur la fonction biologique du syncytiotrophoblaste

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    La placentation humaine est de type hĂ©momonochoriale, le sang maternel est directement en contact avec le syncytiotrophoblaste. Les flux sanguins maternels, dans la chambre intervilleuse, exercent des forces mĂ©caniques de cisaillement (shear stress) sur la surface microvillositaire du syncytiotrophoblaste. Les effets physiologiques du shear stress exercĂ© par les flux sanguins sur l’endothĂ©lium vasculaire artĂ©riel et veineux ont fait l’objet de nombreux travaux scientifiques. En revanche, les effets biologiques du shear stress sur le syncytiotrophoblaste humain n’ont jamais Ă©tĂ© explorĂ©s. L’objectif de ce travail Ă©tait premiĂšrement d’évaluer les valeurs du shear stress exercĂ© in vivo sur le syncytiotrophoblaste humain au cours des grossesses normales, puis de mettre au point un modĂšle de culture primaire dynamique afin de reproduire les conditions physiologique et d’étudier in vitro la rĂ©ponse biologique du syncytiotrophoblaste au shear stress. En dĂ©pit d’un dĂ©bit sanguin maternel intraplacentaire important, estimĂ© entre 400 et 600 mL.min-1, le shear stress moyen exercĂ©e par le syncytiotrophoblaste est estimĂ©e entre 0.5±0.2 et 2.3±1.1 dyn.cm-2. Nos rĂ©sultats montrent cependant que l’intensitĂ© du shear stress est trĂšs hĂ©tĂ©rogĂšne tant Ă  l’échelle de la chambre intervilleuse que de la villositĂ© terminale. Nous avons dĂ©veloppĂ© un modĂšle de culture cellulaire dynamique en condition de flux adaptĂ© au syncytiotrophoblaste humain. Ce modĂšle permet d’appliquer un shear stress Ă©gal et constant sur toutes les cellules cultivĂ©es et reproductible Ă  chaque culture primaire. Aux gammes de shear stress Ă©tudiĂ©es (1 dyn.cm-2), nous n’avons pas mis en Ă©vidence de diminution de la viabilitĂ© cellulaire ni de dĂ©clenchement des processus prĂ©coces d’apoptose en conditions dynamiques comparativement aux conditions statiques. Deux types de chambre de perfusion permettent d’étudier des rĂ©ponses cellulaires au shear stress Ă  court et long terme selon des temps d’exposition allant de 5 minutes Ă  24 heures. Ce modĂšle expĂ©rimental a permis de montrer que le syncytiotrophoblaste humain en culture primaire est mĂ©canosensible. La rĂ©ponse cellulaire Ă  des niveaux de shear stress de 1 dyn.cm-2 est multiple selon les temps d’exposition et le niveau d’intĂ©gration Ă©tudiĂ©. AprĂšs 45 minutes de shear stress les taux d’AMP cyclique intracellulaires sont augmentĂ©s ce qui a pour effet d’activer la voie de signalisation intracellulaire PKA-CREB. Cette augmentation d’AMP cyclique est secondaire Ă  la synthĂšse et la libĂ©ration de prostaglandine E2 qui, par une boucle de rĂ©gulation autocrine stimule l’adenylate cyclase. L’augmentation de la synthĂšse/libĂ©ration de PGE2 est dĂ©pendante de l’augmentation rapide du calcium intracellulaire sous shear stress. L’exposition au shear stress de 24 heures stimule l’expression et la sĂ©crĂ©tion du PlGF, un facteur de croissance indispensable Ă  l’angiogenĂšse placentaire et pour l’adaptation maternelle Ă  la grossesse sur le plan vasculaire. Nos travaux montrent que l’augmentation de l’AMPc intracellulaire et l’activation de la PKA contribuent Ă  la phosphorylation de CREB, facteur de transcription rĂ©gulant l’expression du PlGF.Human placentation is hemomonochorial, maternal blood circulates in direct contact with the syncytiotrophoblast. In the intervillous space, the maternal blood exerts frictional mechanical forces (shear stress) on the microvillous surface of the syncytiotrophoblast. Flowing blood constantly exerts a shear stress, on the endothelial cells lining blood vessel walls, and the endothelial cells respond to shear stress by changing their morphology, function, and gene expression. The effects of shear stress on the human syncytiotrophoblast and its biological functions have never been studied. The objectives of this study were (1) to determine in silico the physiological values of shear stress exerted on human syncytiotrophoblast during normal pregnancies, (2) to develop a model reproducing in vitro the shear stress on human syncytiotrophoblast and (3) to study in vitro the biological response of human syncytiotrophoblast to shear stress. The 2D numerical simulations showed that the shear stress applied to the syncytiotrophoblast is highly heterogeneous in the intervillous space. In spite of high intraplacental maternal blood flow rates (400-600mL.min-1), the estimated average values of shear stress are relatively low (0.5±0.2 to 2.3±1.1 dyn.cm-2). To study the shear stress-induced cellular responses during exposure times ranging from 5 minutes to 24 hours we have developed two dynamic cell culture models adapted to the human syncytiotrophoblast. We found no evidence of decreased cell viability or early processes of apoptosis in dynamic conditions (1 dyn.cm-2, 24h) compared to static conditions. Shear stress (1 dyn.cm-2) triggers intracellular calcium flux, which increases the synthesis and release of PGE2. The enhanced intracellular cAMP in FSS conditions was blocked by COX1/COX2 inhibitors, suggesting that the increase in PGE2 production could activate the cAMP/PKA pathway in an autocrine/paracrine fashion. FSS activates the cAMP/PKA pathway leading to upregulation of PlGF in human STB. Shear stress-induced phosphorylation of CREB and upregulation of PlGF were prevented by inhibition of PKA with H89 (3 ÎŒM). The syncytiotrophoblast of the human placenta is a mechanosenstive tissue

    Sildenafil for the treatment of preeclampsia, an update: should we still be enthusiastic?

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    International audiencePreeclampsia is a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy and the clinical manifestation of severe endothelial dysfunction associated with maternal and foetal morbidity and mortality. The primum movens of the disease is the defect of invasion of the uterine arteries by foetal syncytiotrophoblasts, which causes a maladaptive placental response to chronic hypoxia and the secretion of the soluble form of type 1 vascular growth endothelial factor receptor, also called soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt-1), the major player in the pathophysiology of the disease. Among its different effects, sFlt-1 induces abnormal sensitivity of the maternal vessels to the vasoconstrictor angiotensin II. This leads to the hypertensive phenotype, recently shown to be abrogated by the administration of sildenafil citrate, which can potentiate the vasodilatory mediator nitrite oxide. This review focuses on the mechanisms of maternal endothelial dysfunction in preeclampsia and discusses the therapeutic window of sildenafil use in the context of preeclampsia, based on the results from preclinical studies and clinical trials. Safety issues recently reported in neonates have considerably narrowed this window

    Numerical simulations of maternal blood flows in the human placenta: estimation of the wall shear stress exerted on the syncytiotrophoblast

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    International audienceThe primary culture of syncytiotrophoblast (ST) is a model of the human placental endocrinian functions. In vivo the ST is submitted to the fluid shear stress generated by maternal blood flows. Our hypothesis is that the shear stress could modulate the secretory functions of the ST. The aim of this study is to determine the gradients of wall shear stress exerted in vivo by the maternal blood flows on the ST

    Ultraslow Myosin Molecular Motors of Placental Contractile Stem Villi in Humans

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    Human placental stem villi (PSV) present contractile properties. In vitro mechanics were investigated in 40 human PSV. Contraction of PSV was induced by both KCl exposure (n = 20) and electrical tetanic stimulation (n = 20). Isotonic contractions were registered at several load levels ranging from zero-load up to isometric load. The tension-velocity relationship was found to be hyperbolic. This made it possible to apply the A. Huxley formalism for determining the rate constants for myosin cross-bridge (CB) attachment and detachment, CB single force, catalytic constant, myosin content, and maximum myosin ATPase activity. These molecular characteristics of myosin CBs did not differ under either KCl exposure or tetanus. A comparative approach was established from studies previously published in the literature and driven by mean of a similar method. As compared to that described in mammalian striated muscles, we showed that in human PSV, myosin CB rate constants for attachment and detachment were about 103 times lower whereas myosin ATPase activity was 105 times lower. Up to now, CB kinetics of contractile cells arranged along the long axis of the placental sheath appeared to be the slowest ever observed in any mammalian contractile tissue
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