Exosomes from dairy cows of divergent fertility; Action on endometrial cells
JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY
Authors: Koh, Yong Qin; Peiris, Hassendrini N.; Vaswani, Kanchan; Almughlliq, Fatema B.; Meier, Susanne; Burke, Chris R.; Roche, John R.; Reed, Charlotte B.; Mitchell, Murray D.
Abstract
Abnormalities in endometrial function contribute to poor fertility and reproductive failure. Exosomes are small lipid vesicles that contain transferable bioactive substances; they participate in intercellular signaling and may have critical roles in reproductive mechanisms, including endometrial remodeling in preparation for pregnancy. In this study, we evaluated the effects of exosomes from heifers with high and low genetic merit for fertility on inflammatory mediator expression by bovine endometrial epithelial and stromal cell lines. Co-incubation of exosomes from low, compared with high, fertility heifers upregulated the gene expression of pro-inflammatory IL1A and IL8 (CXCL8) but downregulated IL4 gene expression in epithelial cells. In contrast, stromal cells co-incubated with exosomes from low, compared with high, fertility heifers downregulated the gene expression of CXCL9, CXCL10, and CX3CL1. Our findings demonstrated that circulating exosomes from high fertility heifers did not alter endometrial inflammatory mediator gene expression. In contrast, circulating exosomes from low fertility heifers enhanced endometrial expression of inflammatory mediators, which may contribute to aberrant inflammation, leading to a reduced fertility in low fertility heifers. However, an in-depth investigation is required to elucidate the role of exosomes in regulating endometrial remodeling events required for enhanced reproductive performance and fertility in dairy cows.
Interleukin 1 beta and Prostaglandin E2 affect expression of DNA methylating and demethylating enzymes in human gingival fibroblasts
INTERNATIONAL IMMUNOPHARMACOLOGY
Authors: Seutter, Sara; Winfield, Jacquay; Esbitt, Alexis; Snyder, Samantha; Magner, Anastasia; Kim, Kristine; Carcuffe, Craig; Schmoyer, Jeremy; Kamrani, Payvand; Mercando, Jason; Shamseddin, Seyed M.; Green, Kevan; Borghaei, Ruth C.
Abstract
Periodontitis is a common chronic inflammatory condition that results in increased levels of inflammatory cytokines and inflammatory mediators. In addition to oral disease and tooth loss, it also causes low-grade systemic inflammation that contributes to development of systemic conditions including cardiovascular disease, pre-term birth, diabetes and cancer. Chronic inflammation is associated with epigenetic change, and it has been suggested that such changes can alter cell phenotypes in ways that contribute to both ongoing inflammation and development of associated pathologies. Here we show that exposure of human gingival fibroblasts to IL-1 beta increases expression of maintenance methyltransferase DNMT1 but decreases expression of de novo methyltransferase DNMT3a and the demethylating enzyme TET1, while exposure to PGE2 decreases expression of all three enzymes. IL-1 beta and PGE2 both affect global levels of DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation, as well as methylation of some specific CpG in inflammation-associated genes. The effects of IL-1 beta are independent of its ability to induce production of PGE2, and the effects of PGE2 on DNMT3a expression are mediated by the EP4 receptor. The finding that exposure of fibroblasts to IL-1 beta and PGE2 can result in altered expression of DNA methylating/demethylating enzymes and in changing patterns of DNA methylation suggests a mechanism through which inflammatory mediators might contribute to the increased risk of carcinogenesis associated with inflammation.