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Gene expression of human pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A in placenta from trisomic pregnancies

  • M. L. Brizot
  • , J. A. Hyett
  • , A. T. Mckie
  • , N. A. Bersinger
  • , F. Farzaneh
  • , K. H. Nicolaides

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Placental pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) mRNA expression, placental PAPP-A protein concentration and maternal serum levels of PAPP-A were examined in pregnancies affected by trisomy 21 (n = 8), trisomy 18 (n = 7) and 15 normal controls at 12-15 weeks of gestation. The maternal serum concentration of PAPP-A in the trisomic group of pregnancies was significantly lower than in the normal controls. However there were no significant differences between the three groups in PAPP-A mRNA expression or PAPP-A protein concentration in the placental tissues. There was no significant association between the level of placental mRNA and either placental protein or maternal serum PAPP-A concentrations in the normal or trisomic pregnancies. There was however a significant association between placental protein and maternal serum PAPP-A concentrations in the normal and trisomy 21 pregnancies but not in those affected by trisomy 18. These findings suggest that the decrease in maternal serum PAPP-A in trisomic pregnancies is due to alterations in post-translational events such as protein stability, alterations in the release mechanism of the protein, impaired protein transport across the placenta or modified serum stability of PAPP-A.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)33-36
Number of pages4
JournalPlacenta
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1996
Externally publishedYes

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