Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health

Abstract Preeclampsia is a devastating hypertensive pregnancy disorder that currently affects 2%–8% of pregnancies worldwide. It is associated with maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity and adverse health outcomes both in mom and offspring beyond pregnancy. The pathophysiology is not completely...

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Main Author: Jeanne A. Ishimwe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Physiological Reports
Subjects:
gut
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14875
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spelling doaj-40c22cc7bcc84f05900612a65e764d692021-05-28T17:18:28ZengWileyPhysiological Reports2051-817X2021-05-01910n/an/a10.14814/phy2.14875Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring healthJeanne A. Ishimwe0Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson MS USAAbstract Preeclampsia is a devastating hypertensive pregnancy disorder that currently affects 2%–8% of pregnancies worldwide. It is associated with maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity and adverse health outcomes both in mom and offspring beyond pregnancy. The pathophysiology is not completely understood, and there are no approved therapies to specifically treat for the disease, with only few therapies approved to manage symptoms. Recent advances suggest that aberrations in the composition of the microbiome may play a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases including preeclampsia. The maternal and uteroplacental environments greatly influence the long‐term health outcomes of the offspring through developmental programming mechanisms. The current review summarizes recent developments on the role of the microbiome in adverse pregnancy outcomes with a focus on preeclampsia. It also discusses the potential role of the maternal microbiome in fetal programming; explores gut‐targeted therapeutics advancement and their implications in the treatment of preeclampsia.https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14875developmental programmingdysbiosisgutmicrobiomeperiodontalplacenta
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeanne A. Ishimwe
spellingShingle Jeanne A. Ishimwe
Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
Physiological Reports
developmental programming
dysbiosis
gut
microbiome
periodontal
placenta
author_facet Jeanne A. Ishimwe
author_sort Jeanne A. Ishimwe
title Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
title_short Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
title_full Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
title_fullStr Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
title_full_unstemmed Maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
title_sort maternal microbiome in preeclampsia pathophysiology and implications on offspring health
publisher Wiley
series Physiological Reports
issn 2051-817X
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Preeclampsia is a devastating hypertensive pregnancy disorder that currently affects 2%–8% of pregnancies worldwide. It is associated with maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity and adverse health outcomes both in mom and offspring beyond pregnancy. The pathophysiology is not completely understood, and there are no approved therapies to specifically treat for the disease, with only few therapies approved to manage symptoms. Recent advances suggest that aberrations in the composition of the microbiome may play a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases including preeclampsia. The maternal and uteroplacental environments greatly influence the long‐term health outcomes of the offspring through developmental programming mechanisms. The current review summarizes recent developments on the role of the microbiome in adverse pregnancy outcomes with a focus on preeclampsia. It also discusses the potential role of the maternal microbiome in fetal programming; explores gut‐targeted therapeutics advancement and their implications in the treatment of preeclampsia.
topic developmental programming
dysbiosis
gut
microbiome
periodontal
placenta
url https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14875
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanneaishimwe maternalmicrobiomeinpreeclampsiapathophysiologyandimplicationsonoffspringhealth
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