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BOR - Papers in Press, published online ahead of print June 16, 2004.
Biol Reprod 2004, 10.1095/biolreprod.104.030965
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BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION 71, 1055–1062 (2004)
DOI: 10.1095/biolreprod.104.030965
© 2004 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.


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Nutritionally Mediated Placental Growth Restriction in the Growing Adolescent: Consequences for the Fetus1

Jacqueline M. Wallace2,3, Raymond P. Aitken3, John S. Milne3, and William W. Hay, Jr.4

The Rowett Research Institute,3 Bucksburn, Aberdeen, AB21 9SB United Kingdom Perinatal Research Center,4 University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, Colorado 80010

Human adolescent pregnancy is characterized by poor pregnancy outcome; the risks of spontaneous miscarriage, prematurity, and low birth weight are particularly acute in girls who are still growing at the time of conception. Studies using a highly controlled sheep paradigm demonstrate that, in growing adolescents who are overnourished throughout pregnancy, growth of the placenta is impaired, resulting in a decrease in lamb birth weight relative to control-fed adolescents of equivalent age. Rapid maternal growth is also associated with increased spontaneous abortion rates in late gestation and a reduction in gestation length. Nutritionally sensitive hormones of the maternal somatotrophic axis may orchestrate nutrient partitioning in this paradigm and the particular role of growth hormone is discussed. At midgestation, the placentae of rapidly growing dams exhibit less proliferation in the fetal trophectoderm and reduced placental mRNA expression of a range of angiogenic factors. These changes occur before differences in placental size are apparent but may impact on subsequent vascularity. By late pregnancy, placental mass in the rapidly growing versus the control dams is reduced by approximately 45%; the fetuses display asymmetric growth restriction and are hypoxic and hypoglycemic. These growth-restricted pregnancies are associated with major reductions in absolute uterine and umbilical blood flows, leading to attenuated fetal oxygen, glucose, and amino acid uptakes. Placental glucose transport capacity is markedly reduced in the rapidly growing dams but is normal when expressed on a weight-specific placental basis. Thus, it is the small size of the placenta per se rather than alterations in its nutrient metabolism or transfer capacity that is the major limitation to fetal growth in the growing adolescent sheep. Information obtained from this highly controlled paradigm is clearly relevant to the clinical management of human adolescent pregnancies. In addition, the paradigm provides a robust model of placental growth restriction that replicates many of the key features of human intrauterine growth restriction per se.

1 Supported by the Scottish Executive Rural Affairs Department. W.W.H. Jr. was supported by National Institute of Child Health and Development grants HD28794 and DK52138.

2 Correspondence: Jacqueline Wallace, The Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Drive, Bucksburn, Aberdeen, AB21 9SB United Kingdom. FAX: 44 1224 716622; Jacqueline.Wallace{at}rri.sari.ac.uk




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