Browsing by Autor "Gu, Wanjun"
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Item type: Item , Dysregulated Fatty Acid Metabolism in Preeclampsia Among Highland Andeans: Insights Into Adaptive and Maladaptive Placental Metabolic Phenotypes.(2025) O'Brien, Katie A; Toledo-Jaldin, Lilian; Gu, Wanjun; Houck, Julie A; Lazo-Vega, Litzi; Miranda-Garrido, Valquiria; Yung, Hong W; Yasini, Hussna; Moore, Lorna G; Reisz, Julie A; Simonson, Tatum S; Shortt, Jonathan; Stalker, Margaret; D'Alessandro, Angelo; Julian, Colleen GHigh-altitude pregnancy presents the complex physiological challenge of fulfilling maternal, placental, and fetal metabolic demands under chronic ambient hypoxia. Highland Andeans exhibit signs of adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia, showing relative protection against altitude-associated fetal growth restriction (FGR) and the positive selection of metabolic genes linked to placental mitochondrial capacity. Not all infants are protected, with both FGR and preeclampsia occurring among highland-resident Andeans. In Andeans, placental metabolic dysfunction is evident. By integrating metabolomic studies of maternal-placental-fetal triads with adaptive genetic signals in the fetal genome, we sought to identify adaptive and maladaptive placental metabolic phenotypes in highland Andeans (La Paz, Bolivia; 3850 m), including normotensive and preeclamptic pregnancies. Widespread differences in metabolite abundance were evident between normotensive and preeclamptic pregnancy across maternal, placental, and fetal compartments. Preeclampsia was characterized by a pronounced accumulation of fatty acid derivatives, specifically medium and long-chain acylcarnitines; these were also associated with low birth weight. Genotype-phenotype association analyses revealed novel links between putatively adaptive fetal haplotypes and placental metabolite abundance. Carriers of specific adaptive fetal haplotypes comprising genes linked to lipid metabolism had a greater abundance of placental short-chain acetyl-carnitine alongside decreased levels of linolenic acid (CPT2/LRP8), lower levels of the medium-chain octanoylcarnitine (EXOC4), and greater abundance of free carnitine (LIPG). Collectively, our study reveals a distinct metabolic phenotype in Andean preeclampsia characterized by incomplete fatty acid oxidation and highlights novel links between putatively adaptive fetal haplotypes and healthy placental metabolic phenotypes.