Aberrant methylation of placental development genes in chorionic villi of spontaneous abortions with trisomy 16
O.Yu. Vasilyeva, E.N. Tolmacheva, A.E. Dmitriev, Ya.A. Darkova, E.A. Sazhenova, T.V. Nikitina, I.N. Lebedev, S.A. Vasilyev

TL;DR
This study finds that trisomy 16 in early pregnancy is linked to abnormal methylation of genes important for placental development, which may explain why these embryos fail to develop properly.
Contribution
The study identifies specific genes with aberrant methylation in trisomy 16 spontaneous abortions, offering new insights into placental development failure.
Findings
Trisomy 16 abortions showed significantly increased methylation of PRDM1 and PSG2 genes compared to induced abortions.
ADORA2B methylation was elevated in all spontaneous abortions compared to induced abortions.
Aberrant methylation may contribute to placental development issues in trisomy 16 embryos.
Abstract
In humans, aneuploidy is incompatible with the birth of healthy children and mainly leads to the death of embryos in the early stages of development in the first trimester of pregnancy. Trisomy 16 is the most common aneuploidy among spontaneous abortions of the first trimester of pregnancy. However, the mechanisms leading to the death of embryos with trisomy 16 remain insufficiently investigated. One of these potential mechanisms is abnormal placental development, including aberrant remodeling of spiral arteries. Spiral artery remodeling involves the migration of trophoblast cells into the maternal spiral arteries, replacing their endothelium and remodeling to ensure a stable embryonic nutrition and oxygen supply. This is a complex process which depends on many factors from both the embryo and the mother. We analyzed the methylation level of seven genes (ADORA2B, NPR3, PRDM1, PSG2,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrenatal Screening and Diagnostics · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies · Epigenetics and DNA Methylation
