Data from: Flexibility of fetal tolerance: Immune function during pregnancy varies between ecologically distinct populations
Cite this dataset
Hové, Carmen et al. (2020). Data from: Flexibility of fetal tolerance: Immune function during pregnancy varies between ecologically distinct populations [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.25349/D94C77
Abstract
Background and objectives: Among placental mammals, females undergo immunological shifts during pregnancy to accommodate the fetus (i.e. fetal tolerance). Fetal tolerance has primarily been characterized within post-industrial populations experiencing evolutionarily novel conditions (e.g. reduced pathogen exposure), which may shape maternal response to fetal antigens. This study investigates how ecological conditions affect maternal immune status during pregnancy by comparing the direction and magnitude of immunological changes associated with each trimester among the Tsimane (a subsistence population subjected to high pathogen load) and women in the United States.
Methodology: Data from the Tsimane Health and Life History Project (N=935) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (N=1395) were used to estimate population-specific effects of trimester on differential leukocyte count and C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of systemic inflammation.
Results: In both populations, pregnancy was associated with increased neutrophil prevalence, reduced lymphocyte and eosinophil count, and elevated CRP. Compared to their US counterparts, pregnant Tsimane women exhibited elevated lymphocyte and eosinophil counts, fewer neutrophils and monocytes, and lower CRP. Total leukocyte count remained high and unchanged among pregnant Tsimane women while pregnant US women exhibited substantially elevated counts, resulting in overlapping leukocyte prevalence among all third-trimester individuals.
Conclusions and implications: Our findings indicate that ecological conditions shape non-pregnant immune baselines and the magnitude of immunological shifts during pregnancy via developmental constraints and current trade-offs. Future research should investigate how such flexibility impacts maternal health and disease susceptibility, particularly the degree to which chronic pathogen exposure might dampen inflammatory response to fetal antigens.
Methods
This dataset was compiled by Carmen Hové and consists of data collected by the Tsimane Health and Life History Project (http://tsimane.anth.ucsb.edu/index.html) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (https://wwwn.cdc.gov/nchs/nhanes/).
Usage notes
This dataset contains total and differential leukocyte count (WBC = total leukocyte count, NEU = neutrophils, LYM = lymphocytes, MON = monocytes, EOS = eosinophis, BAS = basophils), leukocyte proportions (neu_pct = % neutrophils, lym_pct = % lymphocytes, eos_pct = % eosinophils, mon_pct = % monocytes, bas_pct = % basophils), C-reactive protein concentration (crp), number of live births (NumPartos), age (Age), body mass index (BMI), participant identification number (pid), reproductive state (RepStatus), age category (AgeCat), population/original dataset (Population), number of repeat measures (Repeats), and presence/absence of repeat measures (REF). There are some missing values (coded as NA), since not all participants had data on both leukocyte differential and C-reactive protein concentration.
Funding
National Science Foundation, Award: BCS-0422690
National Science Foundation, Award: Graduate Research Fellowship Program
National Institute on Aging, Award: P01AG022500
National Institute on Aging, Award: R01AG024119
National Institute on Aging, Award: R56AG024119
Agence Nationale de la Recherche, Award: ANR-17-EURE-0010