Immunological Maladaptation as a Predictor of Spontaneous Preterm Birth in Human Pregnancies
- Link:
- Autor/in:
- Verlag/Körperschaft:
- Universität Hamburg
- Erscheinungsjahr:
- 2025
- Medientyp:
- Datensatz
- Schlagwort:
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- Human PBMCs, Preterm birth, scRNA-Seq
- Beschreibung:
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This data set of single cell RNA sequencing was generated from maternal blood samples collected from pregnant women (n=10) in their first and second pregnancy, respectively, either experiencing a healthy term (n=10) or a spontaneous preterm birth (n=10).
The analysis of this data set is part of the manuscript entitled "Immunological Maladaptation as a Predictor of Spontaneous Preterm Birth in Human Pregnancies" which is currently under consideration for publication with Nature Communications.
Abstract:
Dysregulated maternal immune adaptation during pregnancy plays a central role in the pathogenesis of spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB). However, predictive models of sPTB based on maternal immune features, ideally before clinical symptoms arise, remain limited. In a nested case-control study embedded within a population-based, low-risk pregnancy cohort, we decoded a pattern of abnormal immune response in mothers' blood that precedes sPTB by weeks to months. Prominent features include heightened sensitivity to adrenergic signals within myeloid and T cell populations in early pregnancy, followed by increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the third trimester. CD4+ T cells exhibited gene expression patterns indicative of a Th17-skewed, neuroactive protein–responsive phenotype. Our study provides a multi-omics resource and a conceptual framework for identifying individuals at increased risk for sPTB with broad translational implications for advancing targeted preventive measures.
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- Lizenz:
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- info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
- Quellsystem:
- Forschungsdatenrepositorium der UHH
Interne Metadaten
- Quelldatensatz
- oai:fdr.uni-hamburg.de:18030
