Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Deficiency Increases the Risk of Maternal Abortion and Neonatal Mortality in Murine Pregnancy with or without Diabetes Mellitus: Modulation of T Cell Differentiation
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Abstract
We assessed the implication of peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor (PPAR) deficiency in pregnancy outcome
and neonatal survival and in the modulation of T cell differentiation
in murine diabetic pregnancy and their offspring.
Pregnant wild-type (WT) and PPAR-null mice of C57BL/6J
genetic background were rendered diabetic by five low doses
of streptozotocin. We observed that, in the absence of diabetes,
PPAR deficiency resulted in an increase in abortion rate,
i.e. 0% in WT mice vs. 20% in PPAR-null mice [odds ratio
(OR) 14.33; P 0.013]. Under diabetic conditions, the abortion
rate was enhanced, i.e. 8.3% in WT mice vs. 50% in PPAR-
null mice (OR 4.28; P 0.011). In the pups born to diabetic
dams, the offspring mortality, due to the absence of PPAR,
was enhanced, i.e. 27.7% in WT mice vs. 78.9% in PPAR-null
animals (OR 11.48; P < 0.001). Moreover, we observed that T helper (Th) 1/Th2 balance was shifted to a pregnancy protecting
Th2 phenotype in WT diabetic dams and to a noxious
Th1 phenotype in PPAR-null mice with diabetic pregnancy.
Furthermore, offspring born to diabetic WT dams were hyperinsulinemic
and hyperglycemic, and they exhibited upregulated
profile of Th2 cytokines, whereas those born to diabetic
PPAR-null dams were hypoinsulinemic and
hyperglycemic, and they showed down-regulated profile of
Th2 cytokines. However, IFN-, a Th1 cytokine, was up-regulated
in the offspring of both diabetic WT and PPAR-null
dams. Altogether, our results suggest that PPAR deficiency
in mice may be implicated in the increase in maternal abortion,
neonatal mortality, and T cell differentiation.
