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Arginine vasopressin infusion is sufficient to model clinical features of preeclampsia in mice
Jeremy A. Sandgren, … , Mark K. Santillan, Justin L. Grobe
Jeremy A. Sandgren, … , Mark K. Santillan, Justin L. Grobe
Published October 4, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(19):e99403. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.99403.
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Research Article Reproductive biology

Arginine vasopressin infusion is sufficient to model clinical features of preeclampsia in mice

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Abstract

Copeptin, a marker of arginine vasopressin (AVP) secretion, is elevated throughout human pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia (PE), and AVP infusion throughout gestation is sufficient to induce the major phenotypes of PE in mice. Thus, we hypothesized a role for AVP in the pathogenesis of PE. AVP infusion into pregnant C57BL/6J mice resulted in hypertension, renal glomerular endotheliosis, intrauterine growth restriction, decreased placental growth factor (PGF), altered placental morphology, placental oxidative stress, and placental gene expression consistent with human PE. Interestingly, these changes occurred despite a lack of placental hypoxia or elevations in placental fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (FLT1). Coinfusion of AVP receptor antagonists and time-restricted infusion of AVP uncovered a mid-gestational role for the AVPR1A receptor in the observed renal pathologies, versus mid- and late-gestational roles for the AVPR2 receptor in the blood pressure and fetal phenotypes. These findings demonstrate that AVP is sufficient to initiate phenotypes of PE in the absence of placental hypoxia, and indicate that AVP may mechanistically (independently, and possibly synergistically with hypoxia) contribute to the development of clinical signs of PE in specific subtypes of human PE. Additionally, they identify divergent and gestational time-specific signaling mechanisms that mediate the development of PE phenotypes in response to AVP.

Authors

Jeremy A. Sandgren, Guorui Deng, Danny W. Linggonegoro, Sabrina M. Scroggins, Katherine J. Perschbacher, Anand R. Nair, Taryn E. Nishimura, Shao Yang Zhang, Larry N. Agbor, Jing Wu, Henry L. Keen, Meghan C. Naber, Nicole A. Pearson, Kathy A. Zimmerman, Robert M. Weiss, Noelle C. Bowdler, Yuriy M. Usachev, Donna A. Santillan, Matthew J. Potthoff, Gary L. Pierce, Katherine N. Gibson-Corley, Curt D. Sigmund, Mark K. Santillan, Justin L. Grobe

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Figure 4

Gene expression profiling of placentas from dams infused with saline (n = 4) or arginine vasopressin (AVP) (n = 6) dams.

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Gene expression profiling of placentas from dams infused with saline (n ...
(A) Heatmap illustrating relative expression of genes associated with hypoxia (GRD Hypoxia gene set). (B) Heatmap illustrating relative expression of genes associated with oxidative stress (M15990 gene set). (C) Heatmap illustrating relative expression of 87 differentially expressed genes identified by DESeq2 (FDR < 0.1). (D) Venn diagrams illustrating up- and downregulated genes in AVP-infused mouse placenta (AVP Infusion) that are similarly changed in human placenta in pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia, as described in the text. Numbers indicate total number of genes significantly changed as noted in individual data sets (Leavey [ref. 5], early- or late-onset preeclampsia subsets by Tong [ref. 102], Enquobahrie [ref. 103], and Sober [ref. 103]), whereas genes noted in shared spaces of Venn diagrams are shared by at least 2 overlapping data sets.

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