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The effects of valproic acid on early pregnancy human placentas: Pilot ex vivo analysis in cultured placental villi
Author(s) -
Tetro Nino,
Imbar Tal,
Wohl Debra,
Eisenberg Iris,
Yagel Simcha,
Shmuel Miriam,
Eyal Sara
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
epilepsia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.687
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1528-1167
pISSN - 0013-9580
DOI - 10.1111/epi.14721
Subject(s) - valproic acid , placenta , ex vivo , pregnancy , gestation , epilepsy , gene expression , medicine , endocrinology , andrology , fetus , in vivo , biology , gene , biochemistry , genetics , psychiatry
Summary Valproic acid is an established structural and neurodevelopmental teratogen. Recently, we demonstrated that valproate alters the barrier function of perfused term human placentas. Here, we conducted a pilot study to evaluate the effects of subchronic valproate exposure on carrier expression in cultured placental villous explants from early human pregnancies. Placental tissue of gestational age 6‐13 weeks was collected from elective pregnancy terminations in women without known epilepsy. The effects of valproate (42, 83, or 166 μg/mL) on the mRNA expression of 37 major placental carriers and related genes were evaluated by a customized gene expression array (n = 5, 5 days). Five‐day exposure to valproate was associated with high variability in gene expression. However, two main gene clusters were identified, including a cluster of three major folate carriers. Exposure to low therapeutic levels of valproate (42 μg/mL) was associated with a tendency toward reduced mRNA expression of genes encoding folate and amino acid and fatty acid carriers ( P = 0.065, paired analysis). Our initial findings suggest that valproate can affect the function of the human placenta during early pregnancy.