Prenatal endotoxemia and placental drug transport in the mouse: placental size-specific effects.

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in high doses inhibits placental multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-gp--Abcb1a/b) and breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP--Abcg2). This potentially impairs fetal protection against harmful factors in the maternal circulation. However, it is unknown whether LPS exposur...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Enrrico Bloise, Manzerul Bhuiyan, Melanie C Audette, Sophie Petropoulos, Mohsen Javam, William Gibb, Stephen G Matthews
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3677882?pdf=render
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Summary:Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in high doses inhibits placental multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-gp--Abcb1a/b) and breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP--Abcg2). This potentially impairs fetal protection against harmful factors in the maternal circulation. However, it is unknown whether LPS exposure, at doses that mimic sub-lethal clinical infection, alters placental multidrug resistance. We hypothesized that sub-lethal (fetal) LPS exposure reduces placental P-gp activity. Acute LPS (n = 19;150 µg/kg; ip) or vehicle (n = 19) were given to C57BL/6 mice at E15.5 and E17.5. Placentas and fetal-units were collected 4 and 24 h following injection. Chronic LPS (n = 6; 5 µg/kg/day; ip) or vehicle (n = 5) were administered from E11.5-15.5 and tissues were collected 4 h after final treatment. P-gp activity was assessed by [³H]digoxin accumulation. Placental Abcb1a/b, Abcg2, interleukin-6 (Il-6), Tnf-α, Il-10 and toll-like receptor-4 (Tlr-4) mRNA were measured by qPCR. Maternal plasma IL-6 was determined. At E15.5, maternal IL-6 was elevated 4 h after single (p<0.001) and chronic (p<0.05) LPS, but levels had returned to baseline by 24 h. Placental Il-6 mRNA was also increased after acute and chronic LPS treatments (p<0.05), whereas Abcb1a/b and Abcg2 mRNA were unaffected. However, fetal [³H]digoxin accumulation was increased (p<0.05) 4 h after acute LPS, and maternal [³H]digoxin myocardial accumulation was increased (p<0.05) in mice exposed to chronic LPS treatments. There was a negative correlation between fetal [³H]digoxin accumulation and placental size (p<0.0001). Acute and chronic sub-lethal LPS exposure resulted in a robust inflammatory response in the maternal systemic circulation and placenta. Acute infection decreased placental P-gp activity in a time- and gestational age-dependent manner. Chronic LPS decreased P-gp activity in the maternal myocardium and there was a trend for fetuses with smaller placentas to accumulate more P-gp substrate than their larger counterparts. Collectively, we demonstrate that acute sub-lethal LPS exposure during pregnancy impairs fetal protection against potentially harmful xenobiotics in the maternal circulation.
ISSN:1932-6203