University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology, Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, School of Medicine, 805 Biomedical Research Building II/III, 421 Curie Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6160, USA.
Endocrinology. 2010 Oct;151(10):4756-64. doi: 10.1210/en.2010-0505. Epub 2010 Aug 4.
Maternal obesity during pregnancy increases the risk of obesity in the offspring. Obesity, arising from an imbalance of energy intake and expenditure, can be driven by the ingestion of palatable [high fat (HF), high sugar], energy-dense foods. Dopamine and opioid circuitry are neural substrates associated with reward that can affect animals' preference for palatable foods. Using a mouse model, the long-term effect of maternal consumption of a HF diet on dopamine and opioid gene expression within the mesocorticolimbic reward circuitry and hypothalamus of the offspring was investigated. Mice from dams fed a HF diet during pregnancy and lactation showed an increased preference for sucrose and fat. Gene expression, measured using quantitative real-time PCR, revealed a significant approximately 3- to 10-fold up-regulation of dopamine reuptake transporter (DAT) in the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex and a down-regulation of DAT in the hypothalamus. Additionally, expression of both μ-opioid receptor (MOR) and preproenkephalin (PENK) was increased in nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex, and hypothalamus of mice from dams that consumed the HF diet. Epigenetic mechanisms have been associated with long-term programming of gene expression after various in utero insults. We observed global and gene-specific (DAT, MOR, and PENK) promoter DNA hypomethylation in the brains of offspring from dams that consumed the HF diet. These data demonstrate that maternal consumption of a HF diet can change the offsprings' epigenetic marks (DNA hypomethylation) in association with long-term alterations in gene expression (dopamine and opioids) and behavior (preference for palatable foods).
母亲在怀孕期间肥胖会增加后代肥胖的风险。肥胖是由于能量摄入和消耗失衡引起的,可能是由于摄入美味的[高脂肪(HF)、高糖]、高能量食物所致。多巴胺和阿片类神经回路是与奖励相关的神经基质,可影响动物对美味食物的偏好。本研究使用小鼠模型,研究了母亲在怀孕期间和哺乳期摄入高脂肪饮食对后代中边缘奖赏回路和下丘脑内多巴胺和阿片基因表达的长期影响。来自母亲在怀孕期间和哺乳期摄入高脂肪饮食的幼鼠表现出对蔗糖和脂肪的偏好增加。使用定量实时 PCR 测量的基因表达显示,腹侧被盖区、伏隔核和前额叶皮质中的多巴胺再摄取转运体(DAT)表达显著上调约 3-10 倍,而下丘脑中的 DAT 表达下调。此外,来自摄入高脂肪饮食的母鼠的幼鼠的伏隔核、前额叶皮质和下丘脑中μ-阿片受体(MOR)和前脑啡肽原(PENK)的表达均增加。各种宫内损伤后,表观遗传机制与基因表达的长期编程有关。我们观察到,来自摄入高脂肪饮食的母鼠的后代大脑中存在全基因组和基因特异性(DAT、MOR 和 PENK)启动子 DNA 低甲基化。这些数据表明,母亲摄入高脂肪饮食会改变后代的表观遗传标记(DNA 低甲基化),同时改变基因表达(多巴胺和阿片类)和行为(对美味食物的偏好)的长期改变。