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Submitted on March 3, 2009
From the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (M.S., A.C.S.), Oslo University Hospital, Ulleval, Norway; Faculty of Medicine (M.S., A.C.S.) and Department of Nutrition (M.S.W.-F., G.M.J.), University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; Medical Faculty of the Charité (R.D., F.H., F.C.L), Franz-Volhard Clinic, HELIOS Klinikum Berlin, Berlin, Germany; Hypertension and Vascular Research Center (K.B.B., L.A.), Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC; and the Department of Cardiology and Angiology (K.C.W., T.K.), Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: annetine.staff{at}ulleval.no.
Abstract—Growth-differentiation factor 15 (GDF-15), a stress-responsive transforming growth factor-
Revised on March 23, 2009
Circulating and Placental Growth-Differentiation Factor 15 in Preeclampsia and in Pregnancy Complicated by Diabetes Mellitus
Meryam Sugulle;
–related cytokine, is emerging as a new risk marker in patients with cardiovascular disease. We explored GDF-15 in preeclampsia and in diabetic pregnancies, because these conditions are associated with augmented risk for cardiovascular disease, both in mother and in offspring. Plasma from pregnant women (n=267; controls: n=59, preeclampsia: n=85, diabetes mellitus: n=112, and superimposed preeclampsia in diabetes mellitus: n=11), fetal plasma (n=72), and amniotic fluid (n=99) were analyzed by immunoassay for GDF-15. Placental GDF-15 mRNA and protein expression levels were analyzed by quantitative real-time PCR and immunoblots in 78 and 18 pregnancies, respectively. Conditioned media from preeclamptic (n=6) and control (n=6) villous placenta explants were analyzed by immunoassay for GDF-15. Median maternal GDF-15 concentration was elevated in those with diabetes mellitus, as compared with controls (91 549 versus 79 875 ng/L; P=0.02). Median GDF-15 concentration was higher in patients with preeclampsia than in controls in term maternal blood samples (127 061 versus 80 319 ng/L; P<0.001). In the fetal circulation and amniotic fluid, GDF-15 was elevated in preeclampsia and superimposed preeclampsia in diabetes mellitus, as compared with controls. GDF-15 placental mRNA expression was elevated in preeclampsia, as compared with controls (P=0.002). Placenta immunoblots confirmed a single GDF-15 protein band, and a time-dependent increase in GDF-15 protein was detected in the conditioned media. Our study is the first to show that GDF-15 is dysregulated, both in preeclampsia and in diabetic pregnancies. The mechanisms and diagnostic implications of these findings remain to be explored.
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