Objective: To investigate whether a significantly aberrant expression of circulating placental mRNA genes related with cardiogenesis can be detected at the second trimester of pregnancy.
Methods: The study was performed in two stages. First stage (development model group): match of 14 placental tissues at delivery of fetuses with congenital heart disease versus 20 controls. Second stage (validation model group): mRNA amplification of abnormal expressed genes in maternal blood samples from 26 women bearing a fetus with a congenital heart disease matched with 28 controls.
Results: We identified four functional categories of genes possibly involved in abnormal heart development: cardiac morphogenesis: tenascin, thioredoxin, salvador homolog 1 protein; extracellular matrix (ECM) and valvular tissue biosynthesis; placental-associated plasma protein, collagen, type I, alpha 2, fibulin-1, heparanase, procollagen-proline, 2-oxoglutarate 4-dioxygenase, alpha polypeptide II, Jumonji, AT rich interactive domain 1B RBP2-like; normal contractile activity: actinin, alpha 4, fascin homolog 1, actin-bundling protein; and congestive heart failure.
Conclusion: Altered placental genetic expression was found at term delivery in affected fetuses. The aberration was also confirmed in maternal blood at the second trimester of women bearing a fetus with congenital heart disease. Sensitivity for the most aberrant genes ranged between 42% and 95% at a false positive rate (FPR) of 10%.