25 research outputs found
Advancing human health in the decade ahead: pregnancy as a key window for discovery: A Burroughs Wellcome Fund Pregnancy Think Tank.
Recent revolutionary advances at the intersection of medicine, omics, data sciences, computing, epidemiology, and related technologies inspire us to ponder their impact on health. Their potential impact is particularly germane to the biology of pregnancy and perinatal medicine, where limited improvement in health outcomes for women and children has remained a global challenge. We assembled a group of experts to establish a Pregnancy Think Tank to discuss a broad spectrum of major gestational disorders and adverse pregnancy outcomes that affect maternal-infant lifelong health and should serve as targets for leveraging the many recent advances. This report reflects avenues for future effects that hold great potential in 3 major areas: developmental genomics, including the application of methodologies designed to bridge genotypes, physiology, and diseases, addressing vexing questions in early human development; gestational physiology, from immune tolerance to growth and the timing of parturition; and personalized and population medicine, focusing on amalgamating health record data and deep phenotypes to create broad knowledge that can be integrated into healthcare systems and drive discovery to address pregnancy-related disease and promote general health. We propose a series of questions reflecting development, systems biology, diseases, clinical approaches and tools, and population health, and a call for scientific action. Clearly, transdisciplinary science must advance and accelerate to address adverse pregnancy outcomes. Disciplines not traditionally involved in the reproductive sciences, such as computer science, engineering, mathematics, and pharmacology, should be engaged at the study design phase to optimize the information gathered and to identify and further evaluate potentially actionable therapeutic targets. Information sources should include noninvasive personalized sensors and monitors, alongside instructive "liquid biopsies" for noninvasive pregnancy assessment. Future research should also address the diversity of human cohorts in terms of geography, racial and ethnic distributions, and social and health disparities. Modern technologies, for both data-gathering and data-analyzing, make this possible at a scale that was previously unachievable. Finally, the psychosocial and economic environment in which pregnancy takes place must be considered to promote the health and wellness of communities worldwide
Widespread variation in salt tolerance within freshwater zooplankton species reduces the predictability of community-level salt tolerance
The salinization of freshwaters is a global threat to aquatic biodiversity. We quantified variation in chloride (Cl-) tolerance of 19 freshwater zooplankton species in four countries to answer three questions: (1) How much variation in Cl- tolerance is present among populations? (2) What factors predict intraspecific variation in Cl- tolerance? (3) Must we account for intraspecific variation to accurately predict community Cl- tolerance? We conducted field mesocosm experiments at 16 sites and compiled acute LC(50)s from published laboratory studies. We found high variation in LC(50)s for Cl- tolerance in multiple species, which, in the experiment, was only explained by zooplankton community composition. Variation in species-LC50 was high enough that at 45% of lakes, community response was not predictable based on species tolerances measured at other sites. This suggests that water quality guidelines should be based on multiple populations and communities to account for large intraspecific variation in Cl- tolerance.Peer reviewe
Electrochemical methods for speciation of trace elements in marine waters. Dynamic aspects
The contribution of electrochemical methods
to the knowledge of dynamic speciation of toxic trace elements in marine waters is critically reviewed. Due to the importance
of dynamic considerations in the interpretation of the electrochemical signal, the principles and recent developments of kinetic features in the interconversion of metal complex species will be presented. As dynamic electrochemical
methods, only stripping techniques (anodic stripping voltammetry and stripping chronopotentiometry) will be used because they are the most important for the
determination of trace elements. Competitive ligand ex- change-adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry, which should be considered an equilibrium technique rather than a dynamic method, will be also discussed because the complexing parameters may be affected by some kinetic limitations if equilibrium before analysis is not attained and/or the flux of the adsorbed complex is in fluenced by the lability of the natural complexes in the water sample. For a correct data interpretation and system characterization the comparison of results obtained from different techniques seems essential in the articulation of a serious discussion of their meaning
Microbiome to Brain:Unravelling the Multidirectional Axes of Communication
The gut microbiome plays a crucial role in host physiology. Disruption of its community structure and function can have wide-ranging effects making it critical to understand exactly how the interactive dialogue between the host and its microbiota is regulated to maintain homeostasis. An array of multidirectional signalling molecules is clearly involved in the host-microbiome communication. This interactive signalling not only impacts the gastrointestinal tract, where the majority of microbiota resides, but also extends to affect other host systems including the brain and liver as well as the microbiome itself. Understanding the mechanistic principles of this inter-kingdom signalling is fundamental to unravelling how our supraorganism function to maintain wellbeing, subsequently opening up new avenues for microbiome manipulation to favour desirable mental health outcome
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Spatial multiomics map of trophoblast development in early pregnancy.
Acknowledgements: This publication is part of the Human Cell Atlas. The authors thank the Sanger Cellular Generation and Phenotyping (CGaP) Core Facility and the Sanger Core Sequencing pipeline for support with sample processing and sequencing library preparation; A. Surani for supplying the TSC lines; H. Okae and T. Arima for sharing permission; R. Argelaguet, V. Kleshchevnikov, S. van Dongen, M. Prete and S. Murray for insightful comments and web portal support; T. Porter and the Cellular Genetics wet lab team for experimental support; A. Garcia for graphical images; and A. Maartens for editing. Placental material was provided by the Joint MRCâHuman Cell Atlas (MR/S036350/1). The authors are grateful to patients for donating tissue for research. We thank D. Moore and M. Maquinana and staff at Addenbrookeâs Hospital, Cambridge, UK. Supported by Wellcome Sanger core funding (WT206194 and 220540/Z/20/A) and the Wellcome Trust grant âWellcome Strategic Support Science awardâ (grant no. 211276/Z/18/Z). M.Y.T. held the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship (DH160216) and Research Grant for Research Fellows (RGF\R1\180028) during this study and is also supported by funding from the European Research Council under the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Grant agreement 853546). A.M. is in receipt of a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (200841/Z/16/Z).The relationship between the human placenta-the extraembryonic organ made by the fetus, and the decidua-the mucosal layer of the uterus, is essential to nurture and protect the fetus during pregnancy. Extravillous trophoblast cells (EVTs) derived from placental villi infiltrate the decidua, transforming the maternal arteries into high-conductance vessels1. Defects in trophoblast invasion and arterial transformation established during early pregnancy underlie common pregnancy disorders such as pre-eclampsia2. Here we have generated a spatially resolved multiomics single-cell atlas of the entire human maternal-fetal interface including the myometrium, which enables us to resolve the full trajectory of trophoblast differentiation. We have used this cellular map to infer the possible transcription factors mediating EVT invasion and show that they are preserved in in vitro models of EVT differentiation from primary trophoblast organoids3,4 and trophoblast stem cells5. We define the transcriptomes of the final cell states of trophoblast invasion: placental bed giant cells (fused multinucleated EVTs) and endovascular EVTs (which form plugs inside the maternal arteries). We predict the cell-cell communication events contributing to trophoblast invasion and placental bed giant cell formation, and model the dual role of interstitial EVTs and endovascular EVTs in mediating arterial transformation during early pregnancy. Together, our data provide a comprehensive analysis of postimplantation trophoblast differentiation that can be used to inform the design of experimental models of the human placenta in early pregnancy
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Spatial multiomics map of trophoblast development in early pregnancy.
The relationship between the human placenta-the extraembryonic organ made by the fetus, and the decidua-the mucosal layer of the uterus, is essential to nurture and protect the fetus during pregnancy. Extravillous trophoblast cells (EVTs) derived from placental villi infiltrate the decidua, transforming the maternal arteries into high-conductance vessels1. Defects in trophoblast invasion and arterial transformation established during early pregnancy underlie common pregnancy disorders such as pre-eclampsia2. Here we have generated a spatially resolved multiomics single-cell atlas of the entire human maternal-fetal interface including the myometrium, which enables us to resolve the full trajectory of trophoblast differentiation. We have used this cellular map to infer the possible transcription factors mediating EVT invasion and show that they are preserved in in vitro models of EVT differentiation from primary trophoblast organoids3,4 and trophoblast stem cells5. We define the transcriptomes of the final cell states of trophoblast invasion: placental bed giant cells (fused multinucleated EVTs) and endovascular EVTs (which form plugs inside the maternal arteries). We predict the cell-cell communication events contributing to trophoblast invasion and placental bed giant cell formation, and model the dual role of interstitial EVTs and endovascular EVTs in mediating arterial transformation during early pregnancy. Together, our data provide a comprehensive analysis of postimplantation trophoblast differentiation that can be used to inform the design of experimental models of the human placenta in early pregnancy
Recommended from our members
Spatial multiomics map of trophoblast development in early pregnancy
Acknowledgements: This publication is part of the Human Cell Atlas. The authors thank the Sanger Cellular Generation and Phenotyping (CGaP) Core Facility and the Sanger Core Sequencing pipeline for support with sample processing and sequencing library preparation; A. Surani for supplying the TSC lines; H. Okae and T. Arima for sharing permission; R. Argelaguet, V. Kleshchevnikov, S. van Dongen, M. Prete and S. Murray for insightful comments and web portal support; T. Porter and the Cellular Genetics wet lab team for experimental support; A. Garcia for graphical images; and A. Maartens for editing. Placental material was provided by the Joint MRCâHuman Cell Atlas (MR/S036350/1). The authors are grateful to patients for donating tissue for research. We thank D. Moore and M. Maquinana and staff at Addenbrookeâs Hospital, Cambridge, UK. Supported by Wellcome Sanger core funding (WT206194 and 220540/Z/20/A) and the Wellcome Trust grant âWellcome Strategic Support Science awardâ (grant no. 211276/Z/18/Z). M.Y.T. held the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship (DH160216) and Research Grant for Research Fellows (RGF\R1\180028) during this study and is also supported by funding from the European Research Council under the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Grant agreement 853546). A.M. is in receipt of a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (200841/Z/16/Z).The relationship between the human placentaâthe extraembryonic organ made by the fetus, and the deciduaâthe mucosal layer of the uterus, is essential to nurture and protect the fetus during pregnancy. Extravillous trophoblast cells (EVTs) derived from placental villi infiltrate the decidua, transforming the maternal arteries into high-conductance vessels1. Defects in trophoblast invasion and arterial transformation established during early pregnancy underlie common pregnancy disorders such as pre-eclampsia2. Here we have generated a spatially resolved multiomics single-cell atlas of the entire human maternalâfetal interface including the myometrium, which enables us to resolve the full trajectory of trophoblast differentiation. We have used this cellular map to infer the possible transcription factors mediating EVT invasion and show that they are preserved in in vitro models of EVT differentiation from primary trophoblast organoids3, 4 and trophoblast stem cells5. We define the transcriptomes of the final cell states of trophoblast invasion: placental bed giant cells (fused multinucleated EVTs) and endovascular EVTs (which form plugs inside the maternal arteries). We predict the cellâcell communication events contributing to trophoblast invasion and placental bed giant cell formation, and model the dual role of interstitial EVTs and endovascular EVTs in mediating arterial transformation during early pregnancy. Together, our data provide a comprehensive analysis of postimplantation trophoblast differentiation that can be used to inform the design of experimental models of the human placenta in early pregnancy