1 Departments of Microbiology, and 2 Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, PO Box 24923 and 3 Maternity Hospital, Kuwait
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Abstract |
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Key words: cytokines/recurrent abortions/T helper 1/T helper 2
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Introduction |
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Interestingly, the cytokines that have deleterious effects on the placenta and on pregnancy, i.e. IL-2, IFN- and TNF-ß, together fit the profile of T helper (Th)1 cells. Th1 and Th2 cells represent two polarized forms of T helper cells, and as the major functional subsets of Th cells they mobilize different types of effector responses (Mosmann and Coffman, 1989
; Romagnani, 1994
). Th1 cells induce several cell-mediated cytotoxic and inflammatory reactions via IL-2, IFN-
and TNF-ß, while Th2 cells are associated primarily with the provision of help for B cell antibody production via the characteristic Th2-type cytokines, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6 and IL-10 (Mosmann and Sad, 1996
). If Th1-type cytokines are indeed deleterious to pregnancy (Chaouat et al., 1990
; Hill, 1995
; Hill et al., 1995
; Marzi et al., 1996
), Th2-type cytokines may be conducive to pregnancy, and Th2-type immunity has been proposed to be the normal profile in successful pregnancy (Wegmann et al., 1993
; Chaouat et al., 1995
; Raghupathy, 1997
). Thus, there appears to be a basis for the notion that successful pregnancy is associated with a Th2-bias and that a shift towards Th1-dominance may be associated with unexplained RSA.
It has previously been demonstrated that upon mitogen stimulation, PBMC obtained at the time of normal delivery from women with a history of successful pregnancy produced significantly higher concentrations of Th2-type cytokines and significantly lower concentrations of Th1-type cytokines as compared to women undergoing recurrent spontaneous abortion (Makhseed et al., 1999). In the present study, the cytokine production profile of women having a history of RSA was compared with the profile seen in normal pregnancy at the end of the first trimester.
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Materials and methods |
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Mitogen-induced stimulation of PBMC
Peripheral blood was obtained by venipuncture and PBMC were separated by Ficoll-paque (Pharmacia Biotech L, Glyfada, Greece) density gradient centrifugation, suspended in Roswell Park Memorial Institute 1640 (RPMI) medium (Gibco BRL, Paisley, Renfrewshire, UK) containing 10% fetal calf serum, aliquotted into 96 well tissue culture plates at a density of 105 cells per well and then stimulated with the mitogen phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) (Sigma Chemicals, St Louis, MO, USA) at a concentration of 5 µg/ml for a period of 96 h. Supernatants were harvested at 24 and 96 h; some of the wells were pulsed with [3H]thymidine (Amersham International, Little Chalfont, Bucks, UK; 1 µCi per well) for assessment of mitogen-induced proliferation. Thymidine-pulsed wells were harvested 18 h later and the radioactivity estimated. The stimulation index (SI) was calculated as a ratio of thymidine uptake by PHA-stimulated cells to that by unstimulated cells.
Determination of cytokine concentrations
IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-10, TNF- and IFN-
were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using kits obtained from Coulter/Immunotech SA (France) and TNF-ß by ELISA kits obtained from R & D Systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA). These consisted of sandwich ELISA for which the manufacturers' protocols were followed. Each supernatant sample was tested in triplicate in a blinded fashion. Standard curves were plotted for each of the cytokines using reference recombinant cytokines supplied by the manufacturer and the results read from these curves. The sensitivities of each of the assays were as follows: IL-2, 5 pg/ml; TNF-
, 10 pg/ml; TNF-ß, 7 pg/ml; IFN-
, 3 pg/ml; IL-4, 5 pg/ml; IL-5, 1 pg/ml; IL-6, 3 pg/ml; and IL-10, 5 pg/ml.
Statistical analysis
The standard MannWhitney U-test was used for non-parametric comparisons of median cytokine concentrations.
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Results |
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Comparison of Th2 cytokine production
PBMC from normal pregnant women and from women with RSA were cultured with PHA and the supernatants tested for the concentrations of Th1 and Th2 cytokines at 24 and 96 h of culture.
At the 24 h time point, three of the four Th2 cytokines tested were produced in significantly higher concentrations by PBMC of normal pregnant women at the first trimester; IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 were present at significantly greater concentrations, with P-values of 0.004, 0.0001 and 0.0001 respectively (Figure 1). At the 96 h time point, IL-6 and IL-10 were secreted at significantly higher concentrations (P = 0.0001 in both cases) in the supernatants of PBMC from normal pregnant women as compared to women with RSA. IL-4 and IL-5 at 96 h also showed a trend towards higher concentrations but the differences were not significant. There was therefore an overall tendency for women at the first trimester of normal gestation to secrete higher concentrations of Th2-type cytokines than women undergoing RSA.
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Discussion |
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Studies on human pregnancy failure conducted in four laboratories, support the concept that successful pregnancy occurs in a Th2-biased situation, while Th1-type immunity may lead to pregnancy failure. Studies in Hill's laboratory (Hill et al., 1995) have shown that the PBMC of women with a history of RSA when stimulated with a trophoblast antigen extract produce higher concentrations of the Th1 cytokines IFN-
and TNF as compared to normal pregnancy. It has been demonstrated that the stimulation of maternal PBMC with autologous placental cells in vitro results in a Th1-biased production of cytokines in women undergoing unexplained RSA (Raghupathy et al., 1999
). That this is mirrored by the situation at the maternalfetal interface was shown by Piccinni et al. (Piccinni et al., 1998
) when they demonstrated significantly higher concentrations of IL-4- and IL-10-producing T cell clones from the decidua of women with normal pregnancy than from recurrent aborters. One other study on 40 women with normal pregnancy and five with spontaneous abortions showed increased production of IL-4 and IL-10 and decreased production of IFN-
and IL-2 by PBMC obtained from normal pregnant women as opposed to PBMC from spontaneous aborters (Marzi et al., 1996
). In a larger study consisting of 54 women with normal pregnancy and 23 women with unexplained RSA, a similar Th1Th2 dichotomy was shown when normal pregnant women were compared at delivery with women undergoing RSA (Makhseed et al., 1999
). However, a much more appropriate gestational age control for women undergoing RSA is the end of the first trimester in normal pregnancy. In the present communication, such a comparison is reported between 24 normal pregnant women and 23 women with unexplained RSA, which is a larger sample size than has been reported previously and also with a wider range of Th1 and Th2 cytokines.
In this study, highly significantly increased concentrations of three Th2-type cytokines tested, i.e. IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 were found at the 12 week point in normal pregnancy compared to the same stage in women with a history of unexplained RSA. On the other hand, statistically significantly increased concentrations of all four Th1 cytokines tested in women with RSA were found as compared to women with normal pregnancy. Keeping in mind the point that the absolute concentrations of cytokines secreted in vitro may not in themselves be indicative of a Th1- or Th2-bias, the ratios of Th1Th2 cytokines were compared in the various permutations in the two groups. It is clear from Table I that in every combination of Th1:Th2 cytokines, the ratios were higher in the RSA group as compared to the normal pregnancy group, indicating a greater Th1-bias in RSA and/or a greater Th2-bias in normal pregnancy. Given that Th1 and Th2 cytokines are mutually inhibitory for each other (Mosmann and Coffman, 1994; Romagnani, 1994
), it is likely that a shift towards Th1 bias may tend to down-regulate further Th2 reactivity.
The data presented here may be viewed with three caveats. Firstly, chromosomal abnormalities are responsible for a proportion of spontaneous abortions and while the recurrent aborters in this study and their husbands were karyotyped, the abortuses were not. Thus, it was not possible to rule out the possibility of aneuploidy in the fetuses. Secondly, the data presented reflect events related to maternal blood cells in the periphery and not to the placenta itself, as events at the maternalfetal interface were not investigated. It would be of great interest to analyse events at the interface and at the placental bed. Piccini et al. (Piccini et al., 1998) examined T cell clones generated from T cells infiltrating the decidua and found significantly increased concentrations of Th2 cytokine production in normal women as compared to recurrent aborters. Thirdly, the current study, like many of the studies on human pregnancy failure, has not addressed a direct cause-and-effect relationship between Th1-type reactivity and pregnancy loss; for example, an inflammatory maternal response to a fetus that has died due to non-immunological factors, could well manifest a Th1 profile. However, given the association between Th1 cytokines and pregnancy failure and the demonstrated deleterious effects of Th1 cytokines on the conceptus and on pregnancy, it is suggested that Th1-mediated effects may have been the cause of pregnancy failure in at least a proportion of the cases in the study. TNF- and IFN-
inhibit the proliferation of human trophoblast cells in vitro (Berkowitz et al., 1988
) and are cytotoxic to human trophoblast cells (Yui et al., 1994
). The administration of TNF-
, IFN-
or IL-2 to normal pregnant mice causes abortion (Chaouat et al., 1990
). Concentrations of TNF have been shown to be high in other complications of pregnancy, such as pre-eclampsia in which elevated TNF concentrations appear to be a feature of the disease (reviewed by Kilpatrick et al., 1999). Uterine resorption sites in a murine model of recurrent abortion are infiltrated by natural killer (NK) cells (Gendron and Baines, 1988
); given the fact that the activation of NK cells has been shown to be detrimental to murine pregnancy (Kinsky et al., 1990
) and that NK cells are activated by the Th1 cytokine IFN-
, the relevance of these data to pregnancy failure is obvious. Concentrations of NK cells have been shown to be abnormally high in women with unexplained recurrent abortion (reviewed by Somigliana et al., 1999) Activated macrophages are present in the decidua of resorbing murine embryos (Baines et al., 1997
) and embryo loss in mice has been shown to be associated with local production of nitric oxide (Haddad et al., 1995
). Strong Th1-dominant responses against pathogens compromise pregnancy; for example, infection by Leishmania major results in resorptions, with a concurrent increase in concentrations of IFN-
in the placenta (Krishnan et al., 1996
). In a murine model of immunological abortion, Clark and colleagues have demonstrated that the abortion is mediated by Th1 cytokine-triggered thrombotic and inflammatory processes (Clark et al., 1998
). Thus, a considerable amount of evidence suggests that Th1 cytokines might well be implicated in adversely affecting pregnancy, directly by interfering with trophoblast survival and function, and indirectly by activating cell-mediated immune effectors.
This study also allows us to compare the status of T helper reactivity vis-à-vis Th1 and Th2 activity at the first trimester with that at the time of delivery described by us previously (Makhseed et al., 1999). At the 24 h time point, statistically significant decreases were observed in the concentrations of three of the four Th2 cytokines at delivery as compared to the first trimester. At the 96 h point, this holds true for IL-10. As for the Th1 cytokines, the concentrations of IFN-
and TNF-
were significantly reduced at delivery as compared to the first trimester while IL-2 concentrations were significantly increased at delivery. Thus, we do not observe a clear and consistent picture of significant changes in Th1 and Th2 cytokines produced by PBMC obtained at the first trimester versus at delivery, except for decreases in concentrations of the three Th2 cytokines and two Th1 cytokines in the 24 h culture supernatants. However, a comparison of the ratios of mean concentrations of Th1 to Th2 cytokines at the first trimester (Table I
) and at delivery (Makhseed et al., 1999
), shows an increase in Th1:Th2 cytokine ratios from the first trimester to delivery in many cases, decreased ratios in fewer cases and no changes in several cases. A larger number of the Th1:Th2 ratios appear to be increased and this might point to a probable shift towards increased Th1-bias with gestation. The inference of a shift towards increased Th1-bias at delivery as compared to the first trimester is also supported by the significant decrease in IL-5, IL-6 and IL-10 in the supernatants and the significant increase in IL-2 concentrations. In a study comprising normally pregnant women of whom 16 were tested by mitogen-stimulation at the first trimester and 12 in the third trimester, it was concluded (Marzi et al., 1996
) that a Th1 to Th2 shift characterizes the third trimester. One possible explanation for this apparent discrepancy is that Marzi et al. obtained blood samples at 34 ± 3 weeks of gestation, whereas our samples were collected from women at the time of delivery and our respective data may reflect the situation prevailing at the corresponding stages of gestation.
In summary, the data presented here point to an increased Th1-bias in women undergoing unexplained recurrent spontaneous abortion as compared to normal pregnant women at similar stages of gestation. It would be of great significance to demonstrate a cause-and-effect relationship between robust Th1-reactivity and pregnancy loss and to develop preventive and therapeutic methods for this problem.
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Acknowledgments |
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Notes |
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References |
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Submitted on June 30, 1999; accepted on November 29, 1999.