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Regulatory Myeloid-Cell Dynamics In Asthmatics During Pregnancy

06/2025

Journal Article

Authors:
Tousif, S.; Wang, Y.; Chen, Z. ; Lin, T. C. ; Ahmad, S.; Sherman, S.; Parks, M.; Trevor, J.; Weck, J.; Biggio, J. R.; Subramaniam, A.; Mendola, P.; Deshane, J. S.

Journal:
medRxiv

PMID:
40568679

URL:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/40568679

DOI:
10.1101/2025.05.23.25328090

Keywords:
Asthma chronic inflammatory lung diseases pregnancy myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC)

Abstract:
Asthma is one of the most common chronic inflammatory lung diseases among pregnant women. Acute asthma exacerbations during pregnancy negatively impact pregnancy outcomes. As myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC) populations are known regulators of airway inflammation and are important in maternal-fetal tolerance, we investigated if percentages of circulating MDSC subsets correlated with clinical indicators of airway inflammation and maternal-fetal tolerance in a cohort of healthy pregnant (HP), asthmatic pregnant (AP) and well controlled asthmatic pregnant (WCAP) women recruited to the B-WELL Mom study. Reciprocal dynamics of circulating MDSC subsets, with granulocytic MDSCs (Gr-MDSCs) increasing over early pregnancy and declining in late stage pregnancy and the reverse trend with monocytic MDSCs (Mo-MDSCs) were identified; the decline of Mo-MDSCs at Visit 3 of pregnancy was higher in AP/WCAP compared to HP whereas the decline of Gr-MDSCs at late stage pregnancy was lower in AP/WCAP compared to HP. In AP/WCAP, positive correlations were observed between both MDSC subsets during pregnancy and Gr-MDSCs correlated positively with fractional exhaled nitric oxide, a surrogate measure of airway inflammation, during early pregnancy; these relations were not identified in HP subjects. Interestingly, soluble HLA-G as well as indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase activity, both important in maternal-fetal tolerance, showed positive correlations with MDSCs only in HP and not in AP/WCAP subjects. Our studies suggest that differential myeloid-cell dynamics may serve as biomarkers of maternal-fetal tolerance in AP/WCAP subjects.

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