Syncytiotrophoblast membrane protein glycosylation patterns in normal human pregnancy and changes with gestational age and parturition
- PMID: 1805204
- DOI: 10.1016/0143-4004(91)90498-5
Syncytiotrophoblast membrane protein glycosylation patterns in normal human pregnancy and changes with gestational age and parturition
Abstract
The fetally derived syncytiotrophoblast in the placenta form the major interface with the maternal circulation. Cell surface N-linked oligosaccharides are known to influence cell-cell interactions in a variety of ways. The N-linked oligosaccharide component of the human syncytiotrophoblast membrane has been purified from term placentae, and its biochemical structure analysed. Ninety-five per cent of structures were complex N-linked oligosaccharides, with the remaining 5 per cent being of the oligomannose type. Seventy-two per cent of oligosaccharides were sialylated; 50 per cent having two or more sialic acid residues. Such a population of N-linked oligosaccharides would be expected to provide a surface which inhibits interactions between trophoblast and maternal leukocytes. The temporal changes in syncytiotrophoblast N-linked oligosaccharides from the end of the second, and through the third trimester (25-41 weeks) were analysed, as were the changes which occur during parturition. There was no change in the degree of sialylation of these structures. The only significant change was a 37 per cent decrease in core fucosylation of complex N-linked sugars during gestation (P less than 0.005). Women delivered by caesarean section at term, had significantly higher levels of fucosylation (equivalent to women with a gestational age of 31-36 weeks), than those who laboured at term. Present knowledge of core fucosylation of N-linked oligosaccharides is discussed in relation to trophoblast functioning.
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