Artículos de revistas
Molecular regulation of lung maturation in near-term fetal sheep by maternal daily vitamin C treatment in late gestation
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Pediatric Research Apr 2021
10.1038/s41390-021-01489-4
Autor
McGillick, Erin
Orgeig, Sandra
Allison, Beth J.
Brain, Kirsty L.
Niu, Youguo
Itani, Nozomi
Skeffington, Katie
Kane, Andrew
Herrera Videla, Emilio Augusto
Morrison, Janna L.
Giussani, Dino A.
Institución
Resumen
BACKGROUND: In the fetus, the appropriate balance of prooxidants and antioxidants is essential to negate the detrimental effects of oxidative stress on lung maturation. Antioxidants improve respiratory function in postnatal life and adulthood. However, the outcomes and biological mechanisms of antioxidant action in the fetal lung are unknown.
METHODS: We investigated the effect of maternal daily vitamin C treatment (200 mg/kg, intravenously) for a month in late gestation (105-138 days gestation, term similar to 145 days) on molecular regulation of fetal lung maturation in sheep. Expression of genes and proteins regulating lung development was quantified in fetal lung tissue. The number of surfactant-producing cells was determined by immunohistochemistry.
RESULTS: Maternal vitamin C treatment increased fetal lung gene expression of the antioxidant enzyme SOD-1, hypoxia signaling genes (HIF-2 alpha, HIF-3 alpha, ADM, and EGLN-3), genes regulating sodium movement (SCNN1-A, SCNN1-B, ATP1-A1, and ATP1-B1), surfactant maturation (SFTP-B and ABCA3), and airway remodeling (ELN). There was no effect of maternal vitamin C treatment on the expression of protein markers evaluated or on the number of surfactant protein-producing cells in fetal lung tissue.
CONCLUSIONS: Maternal vitamin C treatment in the last third of pregnancy in sheep acts at the molecular level to increase the expression of genes that are important for fetal lung maturation in a healthy pregnancy.