Mice Placental ECM Components May Provide A Three-Dimensional Placental Microenvironment

Author:

Barreto Rodrigo da Silva NunesORCID,Carreira Ana Claudia Oliveira,Silva Mônica Duarte daORCID,Fernandes Leticia AlvesORCID,Ribeiro Rafaela Rodrigues,Almeida Gustavo Henrique Doná RodriguesORCID,Pantoja Bruna Tassia dos SantosORCID,Nishiyama Junior Milton YutakaORCID,Miglino Maria Angelica

Abstract

Bioethical limitations impair deeper studies in human placental physiology, then most studies use human term placentas or murine models. To overcome these challenges, new models have been proposed to mimetize the placental three-dimensional microenvironment. The placental extracellular matrix plays an essential role in several processes, being a part of the establishment of materno-fetal interaction. Regarding these aspects, this study aimed to investigate term mice placental ECM components, highlighting its collagenous and non-collagenous content, and proposing a potential three-dimensional model to mimetize the placental microenvironment. For that, 18.5-day-old mice placenta, both control and decellularized (n = 3 per group) were analyzed on Orbitrap Fusion Lumos spectrometer (ThermoScientific) and LFQ intensity generated on MaxQuant software. Proteomic analysis identified 2317 proteins. Using ECM and cell junction-related ontologies, 118 (5.1%) proteins were filtered. Control and decellularized conditions had no significant differential expression on 76 (64.4%) ECM and cell junction-related proteins. Enriched ontologies in the cellular component domain were related to cell junction, collagen and lipoprotein particles, biological process domain, cell adhesion, vasculature, proteolysis, ECM organization, and molecular function. Enriched pathways were clustered in cell adhesion and invasion, and labyrinthine vasculature regulation. These preserved ECM proteins are responsible for tissue stiffness and could support cell anchoring, modeling a three-dimensional structure that may allow placental microenvironment reconstruction.

Funder

Sao Paulo Research Foundation

Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Bioengineering

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