Molecular Insights into the Thrombotic and Microvascular Injury in Placental Endothelium of Women with Mild or Severe COVID-19

Author:

Flores-Pliego ArturoORCID,Miranda JaelORCID,Vega-Torreblanca Sara,Valdespino-Vázquez Yolotzin,Helguera-Repetto CeciliaORCID,Espejel-Nuñez AuroraORCID,Borboa-Olivares Héctor,Espino y Sosa Salvador,Mateu-Rogell Paloma,León-Juárez MoisésORCID,Ramírez-Santes Victor,Cardona-Pérez Arturo,Villegas-Mota Isabel,Torres-Torres JohnatanORCID,Juárez-Reyes Ángeles,Rizo-Pica Thelma,González Rosa O.,González-Mariscal Lorenza,Estrada-Gutierrez GuadalupeORCID

Abstract

Clinical manifestations of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in pregnant women are diverse, and little is known of the impact of the disease on placental physiology. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) has been detected in the human placenta, and its binding receptor ACE2 is present in a variety of placental cells, including endothelium. Here, we analyze the impact of COVID-19 in placental endothelium, studying by immunofluorescence the expression of von Willebrand factor (vWf), claudin-5, and vascular endothelial (VE) cadherin in the decidua and chorionic villi of placentas from women with mild and severe COVID-19 in comparison to healthy controls. Our results indicate that: (1) vWf expression increases in the endothelium of decidua and chorionic villi of placentas derived from women with COVID-19, being higher in severe cases; (2) Claudin-5 and VE-cadherin expression decrease in the decidua and chorionic villus of placentas from women with severe COVID-19 but not in those with mild disease. Placental histological analysis reveals thrombosis, infarcts, and vascular wall remodeling, confirming the deleterious effect of COVID-19 on placental vessels. Together, these results suggest that placentas from women with COVID-19 have a condition of leaky endothelium and thrombosis, which is sensitive to disease severity.

Funder

Instituto Nacional de Perinatología

Cinvestav, and by SEP-Cinvestav

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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