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Publication : Iron-dependent apoptosis causes embryotoxicity in inflamed and obese pregnancy.

First Author  Fisher AL Year  2021
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  12
Issue  1 Pages  4026
PubMed ID  34188052 Mgi Jnum  J:307825
Mgi Id  MGI:6725589 Doi  10.1038/s41467-021-24333-z
Citation  Fisher AL, et al. (2021) Iron-dependent apoptosis causes embryotoxicity in inflamed and obese pregnancy. Nat Commun 12(1):4026
abstractText  Iron is essential for a healthy pregnancy, and iron supplementation is nearly universally recommended, regardless of maternal iron status. A signal of potential harm is the U-shaped association between maternal ferritin, a marker of iron stores, and risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes. However, ferritin is also induced by inflammation and may overestimate iron stores during inflammation or infection. In this study, we use mouse models to determine whether maternal iron loading, inflammation, or their interaction cause poor pregnancy outcomes. Only maternal exposure to both iron excess and inflammation, but not either condition alone, causes embryo malformations and demise. Maternal iron excess potentiates embryo injury during both LPS-induced acute inflammation and obesity-induced chronic mild inflammation. The adverse interaction depends on TNFalpha signaling, causes apoptosis of placental and embryo endothelium, and is prevented by anti-TNFalpha or antioxidant treatment. Our findings raise important questions about the safety of indiscriminate iron supplementation during pregnancy.
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