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Dysregulation of bile acids increases the risk for preterm birth in pregnant women

Medicine and Health

Dysregulation of bile acids increases the risk for preterm birth in pregnant women

S. You, A. Cui, et al.

This groundbreaking study reveals a direct correlation between bile acids and preterm birth (PTB), a leading cause of infant mortality. Conducted by a team of experts including Sangmin You and Ai-Min Cui, the research demonstrates how restoring bile acid balance can dramatically reduce PTB rates and improve newborn survival, opening doors to new therapeutic strategies.... show more
Abstract
Preterm birth (PTB) is the leading cause of perinatal mortality and newborn complications. Bile acids are recognized as signaling molecules regulating a myriad of cellular and metabolic activities but have not been etiologically linked to PTB. In this study, a hospital-based cohort study with 36,755 pregnant women is conducted. We find that serum total bile acid levels directly correlate with the PTB rates regardless of the characteristics of the subjects and etiologies of liver disorders. Consistent with the findings from pregnant women, PTB is successfully reproduced in mice with liver injuries and dysregulated bile acids. More importantly, bile acids dose-dependently induce PTB with minimal hepatotoxicity. Furthermore, restoring bile acid homeostasis by farnesoid X receptor activation markedly reduces PTB and dramatically improves newborn survival rates. The findings thus establish an etiologic link between bile acids and PTB, and open an avenue for developing etiology-based therapies to prevent or delay PTB.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Apr 30, 2020
Authors
Sangmin You, Ai-Min Cui, Syed F. Hashmi, Xinmu Zhang, Christina Nadolny, Yuan Chen, Qiwen Chen, Xin Bush, Zachary Hurd, Winifer Ali, Gang Qin, Ruitang Deng
Tags
preterm birth
bile acids
infant mortality
serum total bile acid
newborn survival
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