Endocrinology Unit, University/BHF Centre for Cardiovascular Science, Queen's Medical Research Institute, 47 Little France Crescent, Edinburgh EH16 4TJ, United Kingdom.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2013 Jan;38(1):1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2012.08.012. Epub 2012 Sep 19.
Low birthweight, a marker of an adverse in utero environment, is associated with cardiometabolic disease and brain disorders in adulthood. The adaptive changes made by the fetus in response to the intra-uterine environment result in permanent changes in physiology, structure and metabolism, a phenomenon termed early life programming. One of the key hypotheses to explain programming, namely over exposure of the developing fetus to glucocorticoids, was proposed nearly two decades ago, following the observation that the fetus was protected from high glucocorticoid levels in the mother by the actions of the placental barrier enzyme, 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, which converts active glucocorticoids into inactive products. Numerous mechanistic studies in animal models have been carried out to test this hypothesis using manipulations to increase maternal glucocorticoids. Overall, these have resulted in offspring of lower birthweight, with an activated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and an adverse metabolic profile and behavioural phenotype in adulthood. Altered glucocorticoid activity or action is a good candidate mechanism in humans to link low birthweight with cardiometabolic and brain disorders. We have carried out detailed studies in men and women showing that high levels of endogenous glucocorticoids, or treatment with exogenous glucocorticoids, is associated with an adverse metabolic profile, increased cardiovascular disease and altered mood and cognitive decline. Our laboratory carried out the first translational studies in humans to test the glucocorticoid hypothesis, firstly demonstrating in studies of adult men and women, that low birthweight was associated with high fasting cortisol levels. We went on to dissect the mechanisms underlying the high fasting cortisol, demonstrating activation of the HPA axis, with increased cortisol responses to stimulation with exogenous adrenocorticotrophin hormone, lack of habituation to the stress of venepuncture, and increased cortisol responses to psychosocial stress. We have developed new dynamic tests to dissect the mechanisms regulating HPA axis central negative feedback sensitivity in humans, and demonstrated that this may be altered in obesity, one component of the metabolic syndrome. There are now studies in humans demonstrating that high circulating levels of maternal cortisol during pregnancy correlate negatively with birthweight, suggesting that excess glucocorticoids can by-pass the placental barrier. Deficiencies in the barrier enzyme, potentially increasing fetal glucocorticoid exposure, can also arise in association with maternal stress, malnutrition and disease, and can be inhibited by consumption of liquorice, which contains glycyrrhizin, an HSD inhibitor. Importantly, studies in humans have now demonstrated that high maternal cortisol in pregnancy and/or inhibition of HSD2 are associated with programmed outcomes in childhood including higher blood pressure, behavioural disorders as well as altered brain structure. We are investigating this further, using novel magnetic resonance imaging techniques to study the developing fetal brain in utero. The translational studies in support of the glucocorticoid hypothesis, and demonstrating that glucocorticoids are both mediators and targets of programming, are exciting and raise the question of whether this information can be used to identify those individuals most at risk of later life disease. In a recent study we showed that alterations in DNA methylation at genes important in regulating cortisol levels, tissue glucocorticoid action, blood pressure and fetal growth, are present in adulthood in association with both early life parameters and cardiometabolic risk factors. These preliminary data add to the limited literature in humans indicating a persisting epigenetic link between early life events and subsequent disease risk. Such findings open novel avenues for further exploration of the contribution of glucocorticoids to later life disease.
低出生体重是宫内环境不良的一个标志,与成年后患心血管代谢疾病和大脑疾病有关。胎儿为适应宫内环境而做出的适应性变化会导致生理、结构和代谢的永久性变化,这种现象被称为早期生命编程。近二十年前,人们提出了一个关键假设来解释编程,即发育中的胎儿过度暴露于糖皮质激素,这是观察到胎儿通过胎盘屏障酶 11β-羟类固醇脱氢酶的作用免受母亲高糖皮质激素水平的影响后提出的,该酶将活性糖皮质激素转化为非活性产物。大量动物模型的机制研究已经通过增加母体糖皮质激素的操作来检验这一假设。总体而言,这些操作导致后代出生体重较低,下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺 (HPA) 轴激活,成年后代谢状况不良,行为表型异常。糖皮质激素活性或作用的改变是将低出生体重与心血管代谢和大脑疾病联系起来的一个很好的候选机制。我们在男性和女性中进行了详细的研究,表明内源性糖皮质激素水平高或外源性糖皮质激素治疗与代谢状况不良、心血管疾病风险增加以及情绪和认知能力下降有关。我们的实验室在人类中进行了首次转化研究来检验糖皮质激素假设,首先在成年男性和女性的研究中证明,低出生体重与空腹皮质醇水平升高有关。我们继续研究高空腹皮质醇的潜在机制,证明 HPA 轴被激活,对外源促肾上腺皮质激素刺激的皮质醇反应增加,对静脉穿刺应激的适应能力下降,以及对心理社会应激的皮质醇反应增加。我们开发了新的动态测试来研究调节人类 HPA 轴中枢负反馈敏感性的机制,并证明这种机制在肥胖(代谢综合征的一个组成部分)中可能发生改变。现在有研究表明,怀孕期间母体皮质醇的循环水平与出生体重呈负相关,这表明过多的糖皮质激素可以绕过胎盘屏障。屏障酶的缺陷,可能会增加胎儿的糖皮质激素暴露,也可能与母体应激、营养不良和疾病有关,并且可以通过食用甘草来抑制,甘草中含有甘草酸,它是一种 HSD 抑制剂。重要的是,人类研究现在表明,怀孕期间母体皮质醇升高和/或 HSD2 抑制与儿童编程结果有关,包括血压升高、行为障碍以及大脑结构改变。我们正在使用新的磁共振成像技术进一步研究宫内发育中的胎儿大脑,以进一步研究该假设。支持糖皮质激素假设的转化研究表明,糖皮质激素既是编程的介质也是编程的靶点,这令人兴奋,并提出了一个问题,即这些信息是否可以用于识别那些日后患疾病风险最高的个体。在最近的一项研究中,我们发现与调节皮质醇水平、组织糖皮质激素作用、血压和胎儿生长的基因有关的 DNA 甲基化改变在成年后与早期生活参数和心血管代谢危险因素有关。这些初步数据增加了人类中有限的文献,表明早期生活事件与随后的疾病风险之间存在持续的表观遗传联系。这些发现为进一步探索糖皮质激素对晚年疾病的贡献开辟了新途径。