Maternal High-Fat Diet During Pre-Conception and Gestation Predisposes Adult Female Offspring to Metabolic Dysfunction in Mice

Feb 3, 2022Frontiers in endocrinology

High-Fat Diet Before and During Pregnancy May Lead to Metabolic Problems in Adult Female Mice Offspring

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Abstract

Maternal high-fat diet (HFD) during pregnancy is associated with increased in adult female offspring.

  • Both mothers on Ctrl and HFD gained weight during pregnancy, with HFD-dams gaining significantly more.
  • No differences were found in litter size or offspring birth weight between HFD-dams and Ctrl-dams.
  • Newborns from HFD-dams had significantly lower random blood glucose levels compared to those from Ctrl-dams.
  • Adult male offspring of HFD-dams exhibited normal glucose tolerance but developed transient glucose intolerance when re-challenged with HFD.
  • Adult female offspring of HFD-dams showed normal glucose tolerance but increased insulin resistance compared to controls.

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Key numbers

Decreased
Reduced Beta-Cell Ratio
HFD offspring show reduced pancreatic beta-cell ratios at birth.
Increased
Increased Insulin Secretion
Female offspring of HFD dams show increased insulin secretion under glucose challenge.

Full Text

What this is

  • Maternal high-fat diet (HFD) during pre-conception and pregnancy affects offspring metabolic health.
  • This study investigates the long-term metabolic outcomes in adult male and female mice offspring of HFD-fed dams.
  • Findings reveal sex-specific metabolic dysfunctions, particularly in female offspring.

Essence

  • Maternal HFD predisposes female offspring to , while male offspring show normal glucose tolerance. Both sexes exhibit altered pancreatic beta-cell ratios at birth.

Key takeaways

  • Female offspring of HFD dams exhibit under normal diet, characterized by increased insulin secretion without changes in beta-cell mass.
  • Male offspring of HFD dams maintain normal glucose tolerance and do not show metabolic dysfunction under normal chow or HFD re-challenge.
  • At birth, HFD offspring have reduced pancreatic beta-cell ratios compared to controls, indicating early developmental impacts of maternal diet.

Caveats

  • The study primarily uses a mouse model, which may not fully represent human metabolic responses to maternal diet.
  • Sex-specific outcomes were observed, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear and require further investigation.

Definitions

  • Insulin resistance: A condition where cells in the body do not respond effectively to insulin, leading to elevated blood sugar levels.

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