Waterland R A, Travisano M, Tahiliani K G, Rached M T, Mirza S
Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, USDA Children's Nutrition Research Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2008 Sep;32(9):1373-9. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2008.100. Epub 2008 Jul 15.
The obesity epidemic, recognized in developed nations for decades, is now a worldwide phenomenon. All age groups are affected, including women of childbearing age, fueling concern that maternal obesity before and during pregnancy and lactation impairs developmental establishment of body weight regulatory mechanisms in the fetus or infant, causing transgenerational amplification of obesity prevalence and severity. The biological mechanisms underlying such processes remain unknown.
We used agouti viable yellow (A(vy)) mice to test the hypothesis that maternal obesity induces transgenerational amplification of obesity. We passed the A(vy) allele through three generations of A(vy)/a females and assessed cumulative effects on coat color and body weight. By studying two separate but contemporaneous populations of mice, one provided a standard diet and the other a methyl-supplemented diet that induces DNA hypermethylation during development, we tested whether potential transgenerational effects on body weight might be mediated by alterations in epigenetic mechanisms including DNA methylation.
The genetic tendency for obesity in A(vy) mice was progressively exacerbated when the A(vy) allele was passed through successive generations of obese A(vy) females. This transgenerational amplification of body weight was prevented by a promethylation dietary supplement. Importantly, the effect of methyl supplementation on body weight was independent of epigenetic changes at the A(vy) locus, indicating this model may have direct relevance to human transgenerational obesity.
Our results show that in a population with a genetic tendency for obesity, effects of maternal obesity accumulate over successive generations to shift the population distribution toward increased adult body weight, and suggest that epigenetic mechanisms are involved in this process.
肥胖流行在发达国家已被认识数十年,如今已成为一种全球现象。所有年龄组都受到影响,包括育龄妇女,这引发了人们的担忧,即妊娠前、妊娠期间和哺乳期的母体肥胖会损害胎儿或婴儿体重调节机制的发育建立,导致肥胖患病率和严重程度的跨代放大。这些过程背后的生物学机制仍然未知。
我们使用刺豚鼠黄色基因(A(vy))小鼠来检验母体肥胖会导致肥胖跨代放大的假设。我们让A(vy)等位基因在三代A(vy)/a雌性小鼠中传递,并评估对毛色和体重的累积影响。通过研究两个独立但同时期的小鼠群体,一个提供标准饮食,另一个提供在发育过程中诱导DNA高甲基化的甲基补充饮食,我们测试了对体重的潜在跨代影响是否可能由包括DNA甲基化在内的表观遗传机制改变介导。
当A(vy)等位基因在连续几代肥胖的A(vy)雌性小鼠中传递时,A(vy)小鼠肥胖的遗传倾向逐渐加剧。这种体重的跨代放大被一种促甲基化饮食补充剂所阻止。重要的是,甲基补充对体重的影响与A(vy)位点的表观遗传变化无关,表明该模型可能与人类跨代肥胖直接相关。
我们的结果表明,在具有肥胖遗传倾向的人群中,母体肥胖的影响会在连续几代中累积,使人群分布向成年体重增加的方向转变,并表明表观遗传机制参与了这一过程。