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Preimplantation or gestation/lactation high-fat diet alters adult offspring metabolism and neurogenesis
被引:5
|作者:
Ojeda, Diego A.
[1
]
Hutton, Oliver
[1
]
Hopkins, Robert
[2
]
Cagampang, Felino
[1
]
Smyth, Neil R.
[2
]
Fleming, Tom P.
[2
]
Eckert, Judith
[1
]
Willaime-Morawek, Sandrine
[1
,3
]
机构:
[1] Univ Southampton, Southampton Gen Hosp, Fac Med, Southampton SO16 6YD, England
[2] Univ Southampton, Southampton Gen Hosp, Sch Biol Sci, Southampton SO16 6YD, England
[3] Univ Southampton, Southampton Gen Hosp, Fac Med, South Lab Block,Mailpoint 806, Southampton SO16 6YD, England
关键词:
nutrition;
peri-conception;
metabolic health;
offspring long-term health;
brain development;
GLUCOSE-TRANSPORTER EXPRESSION;
MATERNAL PROTEIN RESTRICTION;
HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS;
BLOOD-PRESSURE;
DEVELOPMENTAL ORIGINS;
ANIMAL-MODELS;
MICE;
BRAIN;
PREGNANCY;
INSULIN;
D O I:
10.1093/braincomms/fcad093
中图分类号:
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号:
摘要:
Poor maternal nutrition during pregnancy is known to impair fetal development. Moreover, the preimplantation period is vulnerable to adverse programming of disease. Here, we investigated the effect of a mouse maternal high-fat diet in healthy non-obese dams during preimplantation or throughout pregnancy and lactation on metabolism-related parameters and hippocampal neurogenesis in adult offspring. Female mice were fed from conception either a normal fat diet (normal fat diet group) or high-fat diet throughout gestation and lactation (high-fat diet group), or high-fat diet only during preimplantation (embryonic high-fat diet group, high-fat diet up to E3.5, normal fat diet thereafter). Maternal high-fat diet caused changes in the offspring, including increased systolic blood pressure, diurnal activity, respiratory quotient, and energy expenditure in high-fat diet females, and increased systolic blood pressure and respiratory quotient but decreased energy expenditure in high-fat diet males. High-fat diet males had a higher density of newborn neurons and a lower density of mature neurons in the dentate gyrus, indicating that exposure to a maternal high-fat diet may regulate adult neurogenesis. A maternal high-fat diet also increased the density of astrocytes and microglia in the hippocampus of high-fat diet males and females. Generally, a graded response (normal fat diet < embryonic high-fat < high-fat diet) was observed, with only 3 days of high-fat diet exposure altering offspring energy metabolism and hippocampal cell density. Thus, early maternal exposure to a fatty diet, well before neural differentiation begins and independently of maternal obesity, is sufficient to perturb offspring energy metabolism and brain physiology with lifetime consequences. Ojeda et al. report that a maternal high-fat diet during the preimplantation period or throughout pregnancy and lactation, without obesity, leads to changes in metabolic-related parameters such as blood pressure, activity, respiratory quotient, and energy expenditure, and also in hippocampal neurogenesis and glial density in the adult offspring mice.
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页数:20
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