Reproductive immunology
Reproductive immunology refers to a field of medicine that studies interactions (or the absence of them) between the immune system and components related to the reproductive system, such as maternal immune tolerance towards the fetus, or immunological interactions across the blood-testis barrier. The concept has been used by fertility clinics to explain fertility problems, recurrent miscarriages and pregnancy complications observed when this state of immunological tolerance is not successfully achieved. Immunological therapy is a method for treating many cases of previously "unexplained infertility" or recurrent miscarriage.[1]
The immune system and pregnancy
The immunological system of the mother plays an important role in pregnancy considering the embryo's tissue is half foreign and unlike mismatched organ transplant, is not normally rejected. During pregnancy, immunological events that take place within the body of the mother are crucial in determining the healthiness of both the mother and the fetus. In order to provide protection and immunity for both the mother and her fetus without developing rejection reactions, the mother must develop immunotolerance to her fetus since both organisms live in an intimate symbiotic situation. Progesterone-induced-blocking factor 1 (PIBF1) is one of the several known contributing immunomodulatory factors to play a role in immunotolerance during pregnancy.[2]
The placenta also plays an important part in protecting the embryo for the immune attack from the mother's system. Secretory molecules produced by placental trophoblast cells and maternal uterine immune cells, within the decidua, work together to develop a functioning placenta.[3] Studies have proposed that proteins in semen may help a person's immune system prepare for conception and pregnancy. For example, there is substantial evidence for exposure to partner's semen as prevention for pre-eclampsia, a pregnancy disorder, largely due to the absorption of several immune modulating factors present in seminal fluid, such as transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ).[4][5]
Insufficient immune tolerance
An insufficiency in the maternal immune system where the fetus is treated as a foreign substance in the body can lead to many pregnancy-related complications.
- Rh disease, or Rh isoimmunization, occurs when the maternal immune system develops antibodies that recognizes fetal red blood cells as foreign.[6] This can lead to a number of potentially dangerous consequences to the fetus including hemolytic disease due to the destruction of red blood cells, kernicterus, or even death.[7] Treatment with anti-D immunoglobulin has been studied extensively on the prevention of Rh disease. However, there has been no conclusive evidence that treatment with anti-D immunoglobulin is beneficial to the mother or fetus when it comes to Rh isoimmunization.[7]
- Pre-eclampsia is a disorder prevalent in 5% to 10% of all pregnancies that can lead to vascular health issues such as hypertension which can lead to other complications such as seizures, hemolytic disease, damage to the placenta, and inhibition of the growth and development of the fetus.[8] Risk factors for pre-eclampsia include older age at which the mother becomes pregnant, obesity, and history of vascular disease.[9] Monocyte activation in pregnancy is mediated by pregnancy hormones to prevent monocytes from becoming pro-inflammatory by inducing apoptosis. However, if there is dysfunction in this process, the activation of monocytes can potentially lead to damage and dysfunction in endothelial cells, which is thought to lead to the hallmark inflammation that is seen in pre-eclampsia.[8] Prevention for those at risk for pre-eclampsia may include calcium supplementation, Vitamin C and E supplementation, low-dose aspirin, unfractionated heparin (UFH) and low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH), and magnesium sulfate.[9] Treatment goals include lowering the mother's blood pressure using antihypertensive medications that are safe to administer in pregnancy.[9]
- According to ESHRE guidelines, recurrent miscarriage is defined as 3 or more pregnancy losses before the third trimester (~22 weeks of gestation) and has many etiologies, including many that stem from immune dysfunction, most of which can be treated with immunosuppressive medications[10]
- An increase in the prevalence of antiphospholipid antibodies (known as antiphospholipid syndrome) can be found in many recurrent miscarriage patients. However, there is no evidence that the increase in antiphospholipid antibodies harms the pregnancy, but is thought to be indicative of immune dysfunction and proinflammatory responses in regards to the pregnancy.[11]
- An increase in prevalence of proinflammatory cells and natural killer cells can be found in women experiencing a miscarriage. However, there has been no evidence that the prevalence of these proinflammatory cells can predict pregnancy outcomes, including risk of a miscarriage.[11]
- Maternal HLA class II allele presence has been found to be potentially linked to predisposed immune attacks against male embryos. Proposed treatments for this immune dysfunction include corticosteroids, allogeneic lymphocyte immunization, intravenous immunoglobulin infusion, and tumor necrosis factor α antagonists.[11]
Microbiology
Uterine Natural Killer (uNK) cells
The maternal immune system, specifically within the uterus, makes some changes in order to allow for implantation and protect a pregnancy from attack. One of these changes are to the uterine natural killer cells (uNK). NK cells, part of the innate immune system, are cytotoxic and responsible for attacking pathogens and infected cells. However, the number and type of receptors the uNK cells contain during a healthy pregnancy differs compared to an abnormal pregnancy.[12] In the first trimester of pregnancy, uNK cells are among the most abundant leukocytes present, but the number of uNK cells present slowly declines up until term.[13] Despite the fetus containing foreign paternal antigens, uNK cells do not recognize it as “non-self”.[12] Therefore, the cytotoxic effects of the uNK cells do not target the developing fetus.[12] It has even been proposed that uNK contributes to the protection of extravillous trophoblast (EVT), important cells that contribute to the growth and development of a fetus.[14][15] uNK cells secrete transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) which is believed to have an immunosuppressive effect through modulation of leukocyte response to trophoblasts.[14]
Killer Immunoglobulin-like Receptors (KIRs) and Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)
KIRs are expressed by the uNK cells of the mother. Both polymorphic maternal KIRs and fetal HLA-C molecules are variable and specific to a particular pregnancy. In any pregnancy, the maternal KIR genotype could be AA (no activating KIRs), AB, or BB (1–10 activating KIRs) and the HLA-C ligands for KIRs are divided into two groups: HLA-C1 and HLA-C2. Studies have shown that there is a bad compatibility between specifically maternal KIR AA and fetal HLA-C2 which leads to recurrent miscarriage, preeclampsia and implantation failures. In assisted reproduction, these new insights could have an impact on the selection of single embryo transfer, oocyte, and/or sperm donor selection according to KIRs and HLA in patients with recurrent miscarriages.[16]
Medication exposure during pregnancy
Pharmacokinetics
Pregnant-related anatomical and physiological changes affect pharmacokinetics (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) of many drugs, which may require drug regimen adjustment. Gastrointestinal motility is affected by delayed gastric emptying and increase gastric pH during pregnancy, which may alter drug absorption.[17][18] Changes in body composition during pregnancy may change drugs volume of distribution due to increased body weight and fat, increased total plasma volume, and decreased albumin.[18] For drugs susceptible to hepatic elimination are influenced by increased production of estrogen and progesterone.[17] In addition, change in hepatic enzyme activity may increase or decrease drug metabolism based on drug composition, however most hepatic enzymes increase both metabolism and elimination during pregnancy.[17] Also, pregnancy increase glomerular filtration, renal plasma flow, and the activity of transporters, which may require increased drug dosage.[17]
FDA regulations
FDA established labeling request for drugs and biological products with medication risks, allowing informed decision making for pregnant and breastfeeding women and their health care providers.[19] Pregnancy category was required on the drug label for systemically absorbed medications with the risk of fetal injury, which is now replaced with pregnancy and lactation labeling rule (PLLR).[20] In addition to pregnancy category requirements on information of pregnancy, labor and delivery, and nursing mothers, PLLR also includes information on females animals of reproductive potential.[20] The labeling change were effective starting June 30, 2015.[20] The labeling requirements of over-the-counter (OTC) medicines we not affected.[20]
Pharmacologic consideration
The change in medication exposure during pregnancy should concern both mother and fetus independently. For example, within antibiotics, penicillin may be used during pregnancy, whereas tetracycline is not recommended due to potential risk of fetus for a wide range of adverse effects.[21]
Drugs
Medications to reduce risk of miscarriage
Progesterone is a medication often used to prevent threatened miscarriage. A threatened miscarriage is signs or symptoms of miscarriage, most often including bleeding that occurs in the first 20-weeks of a pregnancy.[22] Research has shown that supplementation of progesterone can lower the rate of miscarriage, however, it did not have an effect on lowering the rate of pre-term births and live births.[23] In reference to micronized vaginal progesterone, these results were more prominent for people who were at high risk of miscarriage, including people who have had three or more miscarriages and are currently experiencing bleeding.[24]
The use of low dose aspirin may be linked to increased rates of live births and fewer pregnancy losses for people who have had one or two miscarriages.[25] The National Institute of Health has recently changed their stance on using low dose aspirin, stating "low-dose aspirin therapy before conception and during early pregnancy may increase pregnancy chances and live births among a person who has experienced one or two prior miscarriages."[26] This is a change from the previous stance on aspirin preventing pregnancy loss from the National Institute of Health.[27] The reasoning behind the change was the determination that adherence to the medication and not discontinuing low dose aspirin due to side effects "could improve the odds for pregnancy and live birth in this group of people."[26]
Sulfonamides and their risk of congenital malformations
Some studies have shown that maternal exposure to sulfonamides during pregnancy may have an increased risk of congenital malformations.[28] There has been no evidence that certain types of sulfonamides or doses administered may increase or decrease the risk. Exposure to sulfonamides has been the only direct connection.[28]
Medications to increase live birth rate for persons with antiphospholipid syndrome
Some studies have found that using both aspirin and heparin can increase the rate of live birth in a person with antiphospholipid syndrome.[29] It was also found to increase birth weight and gestation age when using heparin and aspirin together.[29] It was also found that people with antiphospholipid syndrome had an increased live birth rate when low molecular weight heparin was substituted in for heparin and co-administered with aspirin.[30]
Sperm cells within a male
The presence of anti-sperm antibodies in infertile men was first reported in 1954 by Rumke and Wilson. It has been noticed that the number of cases of sperm autoimmunity is higher in the infertile population leading to the idea that autoimmunity could be a cause of infertility. Anti sperm antigen has been described as three immunoglobulin isotopes (IgG, IgA, IgM) each of which targets different part of the spermatozoa. If more than 10% of the sperm are bound to anti-sperm antibodies (ASA), then infertility is suspected. The blood-testis barrier separates the immune system and the developing spermatozoa. The tight junction between the Sertoli cells form the blood-testis barrier but it is usually breached by physiological leakage. Not all sperms are protected by the barrier because spermatogonia and early spermatocytes are located below the junction. They are protected by other means like immunologic tolerance and immunomodulation.
Infertility after anti-sperm antibody binding can be caused by autoagglutination, sperm cytotoxicity, blockage of sperm-ovum interaction, and inadequate motility. Each presents itself depending on the binding site of ASA.
Immunocontraceptive vaccine
Immunocontraceptive vaccines with a variety of proposed intervention strategies have been in development and under investigation since the 1970s.[31] One approach is a vaccine designed to inhibit the fusing of spermatozoa to the zona pellucida. This vaccine has been tested in animals with a view to use as effective contraceptive for humans. Normally, spermatozoa fuse with the zona pellucida surrounding the mature oocyte; the resulting acrosome reaction breaks down the egg's tough coating so that the sperm can fertilize the ovum. The mechanism of the vaccine is injection with cloned ZP cDNA, therefore this vaccine is a DNA based vaccine. This results in the production of antibodies against the ZP, which stop the sperm from binding to the zona pellucida and ultimately from fertilizing the ovum.[32]
Another vaccine that has been investigated is one against human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). In phase I and early phase II human clinical trials, an experimental vaccine consisting of a dimer of β-hCG, with the tetanus toxoid (TT) as an adjuvant, produced antibodies against hCG in the small group of women immunized. The anti-hCG antibodies generated were capable of neutralizing the biological activity of hCG. Without active hCG, maintenance of the uterus in a condition receptive for implantation is not possible, thereby forestalling pregnancy. As only 80% of the women in the study had a level of circulating anti-hCG sufficient to prevent pregnancy, further development of this approach will be to enhance the immunogenicity of the vaccine, in order that it produces a reliable and consistent immune response in a higher proportion of women. Towards this goal, vaccine variations using a peptide of β-hCG that is uniquely specific to hCG, while absent in other hormones - luteinizing hormone (LH), Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) - are under investigation in animal models, for their possible enhancement of responses.[32]
Research in reproductive immunology
Studying the female reproductive tract, especially in humans, allows for a better understanding of the immune system, including during pregnancy. However, studying the female reproductive tract has been a challenging area of research due to existing limitations in the in vitro and in vivo tools available. Ethical concerns is another contributing factor in hindering the study of reproductive immunology. Given such limitations, research in this field relies on stem cell culture and technological advancements by allowing scientists to conduct research on organoids instead of living human subjects. In 2018, a Review study concluded that organoids can be used to model organ development and disease.[33] Other studies have concluded that with further technological advancements, it is possible to create a detailed 3D organoid model of the female reproductive tract which introduces a more efficient method to conduct research and collect data in the fields of drug discovery, basic research and essentially reproductive immunology.[34]
Single-Cell Technologies in Reproductive Immunology
The maternal-fetal interface has the ability to protect against pathogens by providing reproductive immunity. Simultaneously, it is remodeling the tissues needed for placentation. This unique feature of the maternal-fetal interface suggests that the decidual immunome, or the immune function of the female reproductive tract, is not fully understood, yet.[34][35]
In order to have a better understanding of Reproductive Immunology, more data needs to be collected and analyzed. Technological advances allow Reproductive Immunologists to collect increasingly complex data at a cellular resolution. Polychromatic flow cytometry allows for greater resolution in the identifying novel cell types by surface and intracellular protein.[35] Two examples of methods in Data Acquisition include:
- Flow cytometry - allows rapid assessment of multiple parameters simultaneously for a single cell.
- Single-Cell RNAseq coupled with microfluidics - allows for efficient cellular transcriptomics.[35]
Reproductive immunology remains an open area of research as not enough data is available to introduce a significant finding.[34]
Cytokine Profiling in Reproductive Immunology
Maternal immune activation can be assessed by measuring multiple cytokines (cytokine profiling) in serum or plasma. This method is safe for the fetus since it only requires a peripheral blood sample from the mother and has been used to map maternal immune development throughout normal pregnancies as well as studying the relationship between immune activation and pregnancy complications or abnormal development of the fetus. Unfortunately, the method itself is unable to determine the sources and the targets of the cytokines and only shows systemic immune activation (as long as peripheral blood is analyzed), and the cytokine profile may vary rapidly as cytokines are short-lived proteins. It is also difficult to establish the exact relation between a cytokine profile and the underlying immunological processes.
The impact of unfavorable immune activation on fetal development and the risk of pregnancy complications is an active field of research. Many studies have reported an association between cytokine levels, especially for inflammatory cytokines, and the risk of developing preeclampsia, although the findings are mixed.[36] However, decreased cytokine levels in early pregnancy has been associated to impaired fetal growth.[37] Increased maternal cytokine levels have also been found to increase the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism spectrum disorders,[38] but also depression,[39] in the offspring. However, more research is needed before these associations are fully understood.
See also
References
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- ↑ Schjenken, John E.; Robertson, Sarah A. (2015), Bronson, Richard (ed.), "Seminal Fluid Signalling in the Female Reproductive Tract: Implications for Reproductive Success and Offspring Health", The Male Role in Pregnancy Loss and Embryo Implantation Failure, Cham: Springer International Publishing, vol. 868, pp. 127–158, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-18881-2_6, ISBN 978-3-319-18880-5, PMID 26178848, retrieved 2021-08-03
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- ↑ Naimi, Ashley I.; Perkins, Neil J.; Sjaarda, Lindsey A.; Mumford, Sunni L.; Platt, Robert W.; Silver, Robert M.; Schisterman, Enrique F. (2021). "The Effect of Preconception-Initiated Low-Dose Aspirin on Human Chorionic Gonadotropin-Detected Pregnancy, Pregnancy Loss, and Live Birth : Per Protocol Analysis of a Randomized Trial". Annals of Internal Medicine. 174 (5): 595–601. doi:10.7326/M20-0469. ISSN 1539-3704. PMID 33493011. S2CID 231713078.
- 1 2 "Low-dose aspirin may improve pregnancy chances for women with one or two prior miscarriages". National Institutes of Health (NIH). 2021. Retrieved 2021-08-01.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ "Aspirin does not prevent pregnancy loss, NIH study finds". Retrieved 2021-08-01.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - 1 2 Li, Peixuan; Qin, Xiaoyun; Tao, Fangbiao; Huang, Kun (2020-12-02). "Maternal exposure to sulfonamides and adverse pregnancy outcomes: A systematic review and meta-analysis". PLOS ONE. 15 (12): e0242523. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0242523. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 7710089. PMID 33264319.
- 1 2 Yu, Xiaomei; He, Li (2021-01-21). "Aspirin and heparin in the treatment of recurrent spontaneous abortion associated with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis". Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine. 21 (1): 57. doi:10.3892/etm.2020.9489. ISSN 1792-0981. PMC 7716630. PMID 33365057.
- ↑ Shi, Ting; Gu, Zhong-Deng; Diao, Qi-zhi (2021-06-25). "Meta-analysis on aspirin combined with low-molecular-weight heparin for improving the live birth rate in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome and its correlation with d-dimer levels". Medicine. 100 (25): e26264. doi:10.1097/MD.0000000000026264. ISSN 0025-7974. PMC 8238312. PMID 34160390.
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- 1 2 3 Vazquez, Jessica; Ong, Irene M; Stanic, Aleksandar K. (2019). "Single-Cell Technologies in Reproductive Immunology". American Journal of Reproductive Immunology. 82 (3): e13157. doi:10.1111/aji.13157. ISSN 1046-7408. PMC 6697222. PMID 31206899.
- ↑ Spence, Toni; Allsopp, Philip J.; Yeates, Alison J.; Mulhern, Maria S.; Strain, J. J.; McSorley, Emeir M. (23 February 2021). "Maternal Serum Cytokine Concentrations in Healthy Pregnancy and Preeclampsia". Journal of Pregnancy. 2021: 1–33. doi:10.1155/2021/6649608. PMC 7925069. PMID 33680514.
- ↑ Georgiou, Harry M.; Thio, Yulinda S.; Russell, Chris; Permezel, Michael; Heng, Yujing J.; Lee, Stephen; Tong, Stephen (May 2011). "Association between maternal serum cytokine profiles at 7-10 weeks' gestation and birthweight in small for gestational age infants". American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 204 (5): 415.e1–415.e12. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2010.12.005. PMID 21292229.
- ↑ Goines, Paula E; Croen, Lisa A; Braunschweig, Daniel; Yoshida, Cathleen K; Grether, Judith; Hansen, Robin; Kharrazi, Martin; Ashwood, Paul; Van de Water, Judy (December 2011). "Increased midgestational IFN-γ, IL-4 and IL-5 in women bearing a child with autism: A case-control study". Molecular Autism. 2 (1): 13. doi:10.1186/2040-2392-2-13. PMC 3170586. PMID 21810230.
- ↑ Gilman, S E; Cherkerzian, S; Buka, S L; Hahn, J; Hornig, M; Goldstein, J M (May 2016). "Prenatal immune programming of the sex-dependent risk for major depression". Translational Psychiatry. 6 (5): e822. doi:10.1038/tp.2016.91. PMC 5545649. PMID 27244231.