Project 408253

Genetics and epigenetics of sex differences in placental and fetal development

408253

Genetics and epigenetics of sex differences in placental and fetal development

$604,350
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Biomedical
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Robinson, Wendy P
Co-Investigator(s): Brown, Carolyn J
Institution: University of British Columbia
CIHR Institute: Gender and Health
Program: Project Grant
Peer Review Committee: Gender, Sex & Health
Competition Year: 2019
Term: 5 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Many differences between males and females arise between conception and birth. As the main regulator of fetal growth and development is the placenta, many of these differences arise because male and female placentas are not equivalent. Male and female placentas differ in their sex chromosome complement, XX vs XY; This leads to sex-chromosome gene expression differences that cause downstream effects on the remainder of the genome. The degree to which male and female placentas differ from each other can also be affected by exposures to fetal and maternal androgens and by genetic variation affecting the expression of key hormones. As such, the effect of sex on the non-sex chromosomes is not discrete, but exists on more of a continuum. Data from DNA methylation, a chemical modification to DNA that is associated with gene expression, has already been collected on over 1000 placentas. Our goal is to identify sex-influenced DNA methylation within the placenta, identify the factors that affect this measurement, and determine if the sex-related differentiation of the placenta is associated with perinatal outcomes such and fetal birth weight and gestational age at birth. This work is important to understand the early events that set males and females on different health trajectories at birth.

No special research characteristics identified

This project does not include any of the advanced research characteristics tracked in our database.

Keywords
Dna Methylation Genetics Placenta Sex