Evaluating DNA methylation and gene expression variability in the human term placenta.
Avila. L L; Yuen. R K RK; Diego-Alvarez. D D; Peñaherrera. M S MS; Jiang. R R; Robinson. W P WP
Key Findings
- Gene expression, including KISS1 mRNA, varies a lot within a single placenta
- Processing time up to 24 hours after delivery sharply lowers KISS1 mRNA levels
- DNA methylation at the KISS1 promoter remains relatively unchanged over the same period
Practical Outcomes
- For lab work on placental tissue, process samples quickly and take multiple biopsies to capture true signals. This information doesn’t translate into actionable advice for biohackers or anyone looking to use kisspeptin‑10 for longevity or performance.
Summary
The study looked at how gene activity and DNA tags change in different parts of a human placenta and found that the amount of KISS1 (kisspeptin) messenger RNA drops quickly after birth, while its DNA tags stay stable. This variability means you need several samples and fast processing to get accurate results, but it doesn’t give any direct tips for using kisspeptin‑10 in health or performance.
Abstract
Obtaining representative samples from a term placenta for gene-expression studies is confounded by both within placental heterogeneity and sampling effects such as sample location and processing time. Epigenetic processes involved in the regulation of gene expression, such as DNA methylation, may show similar variability, but are less well studied. Therefore, we investigated the nature of within and between- placenta variation in gene expression and DNA methylation of genes that were chosen for being differentially expressed or methylated by cell type within the placenta. In total, two or more samples from each of 38 normal term placentae were utilized. The expression levels of CDH1, CDH11, ID2, PLAC1 and KISS1 were evaluated by real-time PCR. DNA methylation levels of LINE1 elements and CpGs within the promoter regions of KISS1, PTPN6, CASP8, and APC were similarly quantified by pyrosequencing. Despite considerable sample-to-sample variability within each placenta, the within-placenta correlation for both gene expression and methylation was significant for each studied gene. Most of this variability was not due to sample location. However, between placental differences in gene expression were inflated by the dramatic effect of processing time (0-24 h) on mRNA levels, particularly for PLAC1 and KISS1 (both expressed in the apical syncytiotrophoblast). In contrast, DNA methylation levels remained relatively constant over this same time period. Due to extensive site-to-site variability, multiple sampled sites are needed to accurately represent a placenta for molecular studies. Furthermore, mRNA quantitation of some genes may be hampered by its rapid degradation post-delivery (and possibly perinatally) and thus processing time should be considered in such analyses. Within-placenta correlations in expression and methylation from unrelated genes raise the possibility that methylation and expression variation may potentially reflect cell composition differences between samples rather than true differences occurring at the cellular level.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-10-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.placenta.2010.09.011
92
43