Fowden A L, Forhead A J
Department of Physiology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EG, UK.
Reproduction. 2004 May;127(5):515-26. doi: 10.1530/rep.1.00033.
Epidemiological findings and experimental studies in animals have shown that individual tissues and whole organ systems can be programmed in utero during critical periods of development with adverse consequences for their function in later life. Detailed morphometric analyses of the data have shown that certain patterns of intrauterine growth, particularly growth retardation, can be related to specific postnatal outcomes. Since hormones regulate fetal growth and the development of individual fetal tissues, they have a central role in intrauterine programming. Hormones such as insulin, insulin-like growth factors, thyroxine and the glucocorticoids act as nutritional and maturational signals and adapt fetal development to prevailing intrauterine conditions, thereby maximizing the chances of survival both in utero and at birth. However, these adaptations may have long-term sequelae. Of the hormones known to control fetal development, it is the glucocorticoids that are most likely to cause tissue programming in utero. They are growth inhibitory and affect the development of all the tissues and organ systems most at risk of postnatal pathophysiology when fetal growth is impaired. Their concentrations in utero are also elevated by all the nutritional and other challenges known to have programming effects. Glucocorticoids act at cellular and molecular levels to alter cell function by changing the expression of receptors, enzymes, ion channels and transporters. They also alter various growth factors, cytoarchitectural proteins, binding proteins and components of the intracellular signalling pathways. Glucocorticoids act, directly, on genes and, indirectly, through changes in the bioavailability of other hormones. These glucocorticoid-induced endocrine changes may be transient or persist into postnatal life with consequences for tissue growth and development both before and after birth. In the long term, prenatal glucocorticoid exposure can permanently reset endocrine systems, such as the somatotrophic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axes, which, in turn, may contribute to the pathogenesis of adult disease. Endocrine changes may, therefore, be both the cause and the consequence of intrauterine programming.
流行病学研究结果及动物实验研究表明,在发育的关键时期,个体组织和整个器官系统可在子宫内被编程,从而对其成年后的功能产生不良影响。对数据进行的详细形态计量学分析表明,某些子宫内生长模式,尤其是生长迟缓,可能与特定的出生后结局相关。由于激素调节胎儿生长及各个胎儿组织的发育,它们在子宫内编程中起着核心作用。胰岛素、胰岛素样生长因子、甲状腺素和糖皮质激素等激素充当营养和成熟信号,使胎儿发育适应当时的子宫内环境,从而最大限度地提高胎儿在子宫内及出生时的存活几率。然而,这些适应性变化可能会产生长期后果。在已知控制胎儿发育的激素中,糖皮质激素最有可能在子宫内导致组织编程。它们具有生长抑制作用,当胎儿生长受损时,对所有最易出现出生后病理生理状况的组织和器官系统的发育影响最大。已知具有编程作用的所有营养及其他应激因素也会使子宫内糖皮质激素浓度升高。糖皮质激素在细胞和分子水平发挥作用,通过改变受体、酶、离子通道和转运蛋白的表达来改变细胞功能。它们还会改变各种生长因子、细胞结构蛋白、结合蛋白及细胞内信号通路的成分。糖皮质激素直接作用于基因,也通过改变其他激素的生物利用度间接发挥作用。这些由糖皮质激素引起的内分泌变化可能是短暂的,也可能持续到出生后,对出生前后的组织生长和发育产生影响。从长远来看,产前暴露于糖皮质激素可永久性重置内分泌系统,如生长激素轴和下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴,这反过来可能会促成成人疾病的发病机制。因此,内分泌变化可能既是子宫内编程的原因,也是其结果。