Maternal IL-33 critically regulates tissue remodeling and type 2 immune responses in the uterus during early pregnancy in mice.
Nuriban Valero-PachecoEric K TangNoura MassriRachel LoiaAnat ChemerinskiTracy WuSalma BegumDarine W El-NaccacheWilliam C GauseRipla AroraJennifer L SonesAimee M BeaulieuPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The pregnant uterus is an immunologically rich organ, with dynamic changes in the inflammatory milieu and immune cell function underlying key stages of pregnancy. Recent studies have implicated dysregulated expression of the interleukin-1 (IL-1) family cytokine, IL-33, and its receptor, ST2, in poor pregnancy outcomes in women, including recurrent pregnancy loss, preeclampsia, and preterm labor. How IL-33 supports pregnancy progression in vivo is not well understood. Here, we demonstrate that maternal IL-33 signaling critically regulates uterine tissue remodeling and immune cell function during early pregnancy in mice. IL-33-deficient dams exhibit defects in implantation chamber formation and decidualization, and abnormal vascular remodeling during early pregnancy. These defects coincide with delays in early embryogenesis, increased resorptions, and impaired fetal and placental growth by late pregnancy. At a cellular level, myometrial fibroblasts, and decidual endothelial and stromal cells, are the main IL-33 + cell types in the uterus during decidualization and early placentation, whereas ST2 is expressed by uterine immune populations associated with type 2 immune responses, including ILC2s, Tregs, CD4 + T cells, M2- and cDC2-like myeloid cells, and mast cells. Early pregnancy defects in IL-33-deficient dams are associated with impaired type 2 cytokine responses by uterine lymphocytes and fewer Arginase-1 + macrophages in the uterine microenvironment. Collectively, our data highlight a regulatory network, involving crosstalk between IL-33-producing nonimmune cells and ST2 + immune cells at the maternal-fetal interface, that critically supports pregnancy progression in mice. This work has the potential to advance our understanding of how IL-33 signaling may support optimal pregnancy outcomes in women.
Keyphrases
- pregnancy outcomes
- pregnant women
- immune response
- preterm birth
- type diabetes
- induced apoptosis
- peripheral blood
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- oxidative stress
- body mass index
- toll like receptor
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- endothelial cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- wild type
- cell cycle
- low birth weight
- preterm infants