Deregulation of miR-324/KISS1/kisspeptin in early ectopic pregnancy: mechanistic findings with clinical and diagnostic implications.
Romero-Ruiz. Antonio A; Avendaño. Maria S MS; Dominguez. Francisco F; Lozoya. Teresa T; Molina-Abril. Helena H; Sangiao-Alvarellos. Susana S; Gurrea. Marta M; Lara-Chica. Maribel M; Fernandez-Sanchez. Manuel M; Torres-Jimenez. Encarnación E; Perdices-Lopez. Cecilia C; Abbara. Ali A; Steffani. Liliana L; Calzado. Marco A MA; Dhillo. Waljit S WS; Pellicer. Antonio A; Tena-Sempere. Manuel M
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin levels rise in normal early pregnancy but are markedly reduced in ectopic pregnancy.
- miR‑324‑3p directly represses the KISS1 gene, lowering kisspeptin production in ectopic pregnancies.
- A blood test combining kisspeptin and miR‑324‑3p levels can distinguish ectopic pregnancy from normal early pregnancy with high accuracy (AUC ~0.95).
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑directed health optimizers, this research offers no actionable protocols or benefits for longevity, metabolism, or performance. It is primarily a diagnostic tool for a specific reproductive condition and does not translate to general health or performance enhancement.
Summary
The study found that a hormone called kisspeptin, which normally rises early in a healthy pregnancy, is much lower in women with ectopic (outside‑the‑uterus) pregnancies. This drop is linked to a tiny RNA molecule (miR‑324‑3p) that suppresses the gene that makes kisspeptin. Measuring both kisspeptin and miR‑324‑3p in blood could accurately tell doctors if a pregnancy is ectopic.
Abstract
Ectopic pregnancy is a life-threatening condition for which novel screening tools that would enable early accurate diagnosis would improve clinical outcomes. Kisspeptins, encoded by KISS1, play an essential role in human reproduction, at least partially by regulating placental function and possibly embryo implantation. Kisspeptin levels are elevated massively in normal pregnancy and reportedly altered in various gestational pathologic diseases. Yet, the pathophysiologic role of KISS1/kisspeptin in ectopic pregnancy has not been investigated previously. The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes of KISS1/kisspeptin levels in ectopic pregnancy and their underlaying molecular mechanisms and to ascertain the diagnostic implications of these changes. A total of 122 women with normal pregnancy who underwent voluntary termination of pregnancy and 84 patients who experienced tubal ectopic pregnancy were recruited. Measurements of plasma kisspeptins and KISS1 expression analyses in human embryonic/placental tissue were conducted in ectopic pregnancy and voluntary termination of pregnancy control subjects during the early gestational window (<12 weeks). Putative microRNA regulators of KISS1 were predicted in silico, followed by expression analyses of selected microRNAs and validation of repressive interactions in vitro. Circulating levels of these microRNAs were also assayed in ectopic pregnancy vs voluntary termination of pregnancy. Circulating kisspeptins gradually increased during the first trimester of normal pregnancy but were reduced markedly in ectopic pregnancy. This profile correlated with the expression levels of KISS1 in human embryonic/placental tissue, which increased in voluntary termination of pregnancy but remained suppressed in ectopic pregnancy. Bioinformatic predictions and expression analyses identified miR-27b-3p and miR-324-3p as putative repressors of KISS1 in human embryonic/placental tissue at <12 weeks gestation, when expression of microRNAs was low in voluntary termination of pregnancy control subjects but significantly increased in ectopic pregnancy. Yet, a significant repressive interaction was documented only for miR-324-3p, occurring at the predicted 3'-UTR of KISS1. Interestingly, circulating levels of miR-324-3p, but not of miR-27b-3p, were suppressed distinctly in ectopic pregnancy, despite elevated tissue expression of the pre-microRNA. A decision-tree model that used kisspeptin and miR-324-3p levels was successful in discriminating ectopic pregnancy vs voluntary termination of pregnancy, with a receiver-operating characteristic area under the curve of 0.95±0.02 (95% confidence interval). Our results document a significant down-regulation of KISS1/kisspeptins in early stages of ectopic pregnancy via, at least partially, a repressive interaction with miR-324-3p. Our data identify circulating kisspeptins and miR-324-3p as putative biomarkers for accurate screening of ectopic pregnancy at early gestational ages.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-01-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ajog.2019.01.228
24
50