Gestational diabetes mellitus alters placental precursor mRNA splicing

Autor/innen

  • Eden Engal
  • Adi Gershon
  • Shiri Melamed
  • Aveksha Sharma
  • Hadas Ner-Gaon
  • Shiri Jaffe-Herman
  • Yuval Nevo
  • Alena Kirzhner
  • Oren Barak
  • Edi Vaisbuch
  • Gillian Kay
  • Anne Cathrine Staff
  • Ralf Dechend
  • Florian Herse
  • Tal Shay
  • Maayan Salton
  • Tal Schiller

Journal

  • Diabetes

Quellenangabe

  • Diabetes 75 (1): 193-204

Zusammenfassung

  • Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is defined as hyperglycemia first identified during pregnancy and can lead to adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes. The molecular mechanisms leading to these outcomes are currently poorly understood. While transcriptomics of GDM placentas has been previously studied, the effect on precursor mRNA splicing remains largely unknown. This study explores the impact of GDM on placental splicing and identifies its regulatory mechanisms. Using RNA sequencing data from Norwegian and Chinese cohorts, we uncovered thousands of differential splicing events. Pathway enrichment analysis revealed significant associations with metabolic and diabetes-related pathways. Splicing factor motif and cross-linking and immunoprecipitation sequencing analyses highlighted serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 10 (SRSF10) as a key regulator in this process, with its binding enriched at misspliced exons. Silencing SRSF10 in placental cells mirrored GDM-associated missplicing in key genes. These findings underscore splicing dysregulation as a critical process in GDM pathogenesis, suggesting that targeting SRSF10 could be a potential therapeutic approach to mitigate the deleterious effects of GDM.


DOI

doi:10.2337/db25-0333