Sex at the interface: the origin and impact of sex differences in the developing human placenta

被引:0
作者
Amy E. Braun
Olivia R. Mitchel
Tania L. Gonzalez
Tianyanxin Sun
Amy E. Flowers
Margareta D. Pisarska
Virginia D. Winn
机构
[1] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
[2] Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
来源
Biology of Sex Differences | / 13卷
关键词
Sex; Placenta; Differences; Gene expression; Fetal; Transcriptome; Pregnancy complications;
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摘要
The fetal placenta is a source of hormones and immune factors that play a vital role in maintaining pregnancy and facilitating fetal growth. Cells in this extraembryonic compartment match the chromosomal sex of the embryo itself. Sex differences have been observed in common gestational pathologies, highlighting the importance of maternal immune tolerance to the fetal compartment. Over the past decade, several studies examining placentas from term pregnancies have revealed widespread sex differences in hormone signaling, immune signaling, and metabolic functions. Given the rapid and dynamic development of the human placenta, sex differences that exist at term (37–42 weeks gestation) are unlikely to align precisely with those present at earlier stages when the fetal–maternal interface is being formed and the foundations of a healthy or diseased pregnancy are established. While fetal sex as a variable is often left unreported in studies performing transcriptomic profiling of the first-trimester human placenta, four recent studies have specifically examined fetal sex in early human placental development. In this review, we discuss the findings from these publications and consider the evidence for the genetic, hormonal, and immune mechanisms that are theorized to account for sex differences in early human placenta. We also highlight the cellular and molecular processes that are most likely to be impacted by fetal sex and the evolutionary pressures that may have given rise to these differences. With growing recognition of the fetal origins of health and disease, it is important to shed light on sex differences in early prenatal development, as these observations may unlock insight into the foundations of sex-biased pathologies that emerge later in life.
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