A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Interleukin-7, T helper 1, and regulatory T-cell activity-related cytokines are increased during the second trimester of healthy pregnancy compared to non-pregnant women




AuthorsAili Tagoma, Kadri Haller-Kikkatalo, Kristine Roos, Astrid Oras, Anne Kirss, Jorma Ilonen, Raivo Uibo

PublisherBlackwell Publishing Ltd

Publication year2019

JournalAmerican Journal of Reproductive Immunology

Journal name in sourceAmerican Journal of Reproductive Immunology

Article numbere13188

Volume82

Issue6

Number of pages10

ISSN1046-7408

eISSN1600-0897

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/aji.13188


Abstract

Problem

Healthy pregnancy is associated with a physiologic increase in inflammatory responses. The objective of this study was to assess changes in plasma cytokines associated with uncomplicated pregnancy.

Method of study

To examine these changes, plasma levels of immune response mediators from healthy gravidas (N = 115, gestation weeks 23‐30) were compared with those from healthy non‐pregnant women (N = 42). Comparisons were performed using multiplex analysis for Th1 activity‐related cytokines (IFN‐γ, IL‐2, sIL‐2Rα, IL‐12[P70], and IL‐27), Th2 activity‐related cytokines (IL‐4, IL‐5, and IL‐13), other immune response mediators (GM‐CSF, IL‐1β, sIL‐1RI, IL‐6, IL‐8, IL‐15, IL‐17A, IL‐17F, IL‐21, IL‐22, IL‐23, TGFβ1, TGFβ2, TGFβ3, and TNFα), regulatory T cell–related cytokines (IL‐10 and sTNFRII), adipokines (adiponectin, leptin, PAI‐1, and resistin), chemokines (IP‐10, MCP‐1, and MIP‐1β), and hematopoietic growth factor IL‐7.

Results

Multivariate linear regression models showed increased levels of IL‐7, Th1‐, and Treg activity‐related cytokines and decreased levels of adipokines and chemokines in healthy gravidas compared with healthy non‐pregnant women. Additionally, season of the year, age, pre‐pregnancy body mass index, and HLA‐DR/DQ genotypes for type 1 diabetes risk showed different and sometimes reciprocal influence on cytokine levels.

Conclusion

Our study stresses the importance of profiling immune response mediators during pregnancy to better understand the effect of healthy pregnancy on cytokine levels.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:54