A putative role for telocytes in placental barrier impairment during preeclampsia
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Bosco Becerra, Cleofina
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A putative role for telocytes in placental barrier impairment during preeclampsia
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Abstract
Preeclampsia (PE) is a major health problem occurring in pregnant women and the principal cause of
maternal morbidity and perinatal mortality. It is characterized by alteration of the extravilli trophoblast
cell migration toward the endometrial spiral arteries with a concomitant reduction in maternal blood
flow in the placenta. This result in a state of ischemia–hypoxia which triggers an oxidative stress stage
with production of reactive oxygen species. A cascade of cellular and molecular events leads then to
endothelial dysfunction, transduction pathway signal disruption and induction of apoptosis and necrosis
mechanisms and therefore a significant reduction in the amount of nutrients required for normal fetal
development. Placental anchoring chorionic and stem villi present a skeleton of myofibroblasts arranged
in parallel disposition to its longitudinal axis. The intraplacental blood volume is controlled by the contraction/
relaxation of these myofibroblasts, promoting the delivery of nutrients and metabolites to the
fetus. Recently, a new mesodermal originated cell type has been described in the villous stroma, the so
named ‘‘telocytes’’. These cells are strategically located between the smooth muscle cells of the blood
vessel wall and the myofibroblasts, and it is reasonable to hypothesize that they may play a pacemaker
role, as in the intestine. This study provide new information supporting the notion that the occurrence of
oxidative stress in PE is not only related to endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis of the trophoblast cells,
but also involves telocytes and its putative role in the regulation of fetal blood flow and the intraplacental
blood volume. Some ideas aimed at dilucidating the relationship between placental failure
and the behavior of telocytes in pathological organs in adulthood, are also discussed.
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This review was supported by Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y
Tecnológico (FONDECYT), Grant 1090245.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132796
DOI: DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2014.11.019
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Medical Hypotheses 84 (2015) 72–77
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