The impact of prenatal circadian rhythm disruption on pregnancy outcomes and long-term metabolic health of mice progeny

Jul 28, 2016Chronobiology international

Effects of disrupted daily rhythms during pregnancy on birth outcomes and long-term metabolism in mouse offspring

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Abstract

Pregnancy outcomes and offspring weight were not significantly affected by maternal genotype in mice with disrupted circadian rhythms.

  • No significant differences were found in days to mate, gestation length, litter size, or perinatal mortality between wildtype and ClockΔ19+MEL mutant dams.
  • Offspring weight at birth and throughout postnatal growth stages was similar for both genotypes.
  • Sex influenced tissue weights at 3 and 12 months, but maternal genotype showed minimal effects.
  • Offspring from ClockΔ19+MEL mutant dams had a 32% reduction in relative adrenal weight and a 16% increase in gastrocnemius muscle at 3 months of age.
  • Female offspring from ClockΔ19+MEL mutant dams exhibited a 25% reduction in glucose tolerance area under the curve at 3 months, with no differences at 12 months.
  • Maternal genotype did not impact insulin tolerance at either age for both sexes.

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