Detrimental effect of maternal and post-weaning high-fat diet on the reproductive function in the adult female offspring rat: roles of insulin-like growth factor 2 and the ovarian circadian clock

Apr 19, 2017Journal of assisted reproduction and genetics

High-fat diet before and after weaning may harm adult female rats' reproduction through growth factor 2 and the ovarian body clock

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Abstract

Offspring exposed to a post-weaning high-fat diet had a decrease in small follicle numbers.

  • Ovaries from female offspring on post-weaning high-fat diets displayed reduced small follicle counts, but antral follicles and corpora lutea remained unchanged.
  • Increased plasma estradiol concentrations and reduced luteinizing hormone levels were observed in offspring from high-fat diet-fed mothers.
  • Maternal high-fat diet exposure led to elevated levels of the imprinted gene and core circadian rhythm genes in the ovaries of female offspring.
  • Different dietary exposures during and after weaning influenced reproductive profiles and hormonal regulation in adult female offspring.

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Key numbers

2.0×
Reduction in Small Follicles
Observed in C/HF group compared to C/C group.
1.9×
Increase in Estradiol Levels
Highest levels in HF/HF group compared to C/C group.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research evaluates how maternal and post-weaning high-fat (HF) diets affect ovarian function in female offspring rats.
  • It focuses on ovarian follicular development, steroid hormone levels, and gene expression related to circadian rhythms.
  • The study aims to determine whether maternal and post-weaning HF diets pose similar reproductive risks.

Essence

  • Maternal and post-weaning HF diets program reproductive outcomes in female offspring rats differently. Post-weaning HF diet reduces small follicle numbers, while maternal HF diet adversely affects steroidogenesis and alters circadian gene expression.

Key takeaways

  • Post-weaning HF diet results in a 2.0-fold reduction in small follicles compared to normal diet offspring. This indicates a significant impact on early ovarian follicle development.
  • Maternal HF diet leads to increased estradiol levels and decreased luteinizing hormone levels in offspring. This hormonal change suggests long-term effects on reproductive function.
  • Increased expression of the imprinted gene and in offspring ovaries is associated with maternal HF diet. This alteration may contribute to reproductive dysfunction.

Caveats

  • The study does not assess the estrous cycle phase during tissue collection, which may influence the results regarding follicle counts.
  • Other aspects of reproductive function, such as puberty onset and estrous cycle regularity, were not evaluated, limiting the understanding of HF diet impacts.

Definitions

  • Insulin-like growth factor 2 (Igf2): An epigenetically imprinted gene that regulates ovarian follicular development and steroidogenesis.
  • Circadian clock genes: Genes that regulate biological rhythms, influencing metabolism and reproductive functions.

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