Abstract
<jats:p>Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) is a major cause of neurodevelopmental disorders, yet most children are diagnosed late or misdiagnosed. Neuroplacentology suggest that placental factors released into maternal and/or umbilical cord blood contribute to fetal brain development. Consistently, a preclinical inter-organ transcriptomic database revealed that PAE disrupts the expression ratio of angiogenic and inflammatory factors suggesting an angio-inflammatory response. This study aimed i) to assay, by multiplex immunoassay, angiogenic and inflammatory factors in maternal and umbilical cord blood from alcohol-consuming women and ii) to perform a maternofetal analysis according to neonatal sex. Afterwards, dysregulated factors from mothers who gave birth to females or males were submitted to STRING and ShinyGO analyses. Results showed that PAE differently altered the distribution profiles of dysregulated angiogenic and inflammatory factors in maternal and umbilical cord blood. Moreover, sex-specific differences were observed, with 36% of dysregulated proteins specific to males, 48% to females, and 16% common to both. STRING analysis revealed robust functional protein-protein interactions linking together inflammatory and angiogenic clusters while the ShinyGO analysis identified enriched pathways related to vascular shear stress. These findings provide the first maternofetal analysis of combined angiogenic and inflammatory factors from alcohol-consuming mothers.</jats:p>