Borengasser Sarah J, Kang Ping, Faske Jennifer, Gomez-Acevedo Horacio, Blackburn Michael L, Badger Thomas M, Shankar Kartik
Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center, Little Rock, Arkansas, United States of America ; Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas, United States of America.
Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center, Little Rock, Arkansas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 9;9(1):e84209. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0084209. eCollection 2014.
The risk of obesity in adulthood is subject to programming beginning at conception. In animal models, exposure to maternal obesity and high fat diets influences the risk of obesity in the offspring. Among other long-term changes, offspring from obese rats develop hyperinsulinemia, hepatic steatosis, and lipogenic gene expression in the liver at weaning. However, the precise underlying mechanisms leading to metabolic dysregulation in the offspring remains unclear. Using a rat model of overfeeding-induced obesity, we previously demonstrated that exposure to maternal obesity from pre-conception to birth, is sufficient to program increased obesity risk in the offspring. Offspring of obese rat dams gain greater body weight and fat mass when fed high fat diet (HFD) as compared to lean dam. Since, disruptions of diurnal circadian rhythm are known to detrimentally impact metabolically active tissues such as liver, we examined the hypothesis that maternal obesity leads to perturbations of core clock components and thus energy metabolism in offspring liver. Offspring from lean and obese dams were examined at post-natal day 35, following a short (2 wk) HFD challenge. Hepatic mRNA expression of circadian (CLOCK, BMAL1, REV-ERBα, CRY, PER) and metabolic (PPARα, SIRT1) genes were strongly suppressed in offspring exposed to both maternal obesity and HFD. Using a mathematical model, we identified two distinct biological mechanisms that modulate PPARα mRNA expression: i) decreased mRNA synthesis rates; and ii) increased non-specific mRNA degradation rate. Moreover, our findings demonstrate that changes in PPARα transcription were associated with epigenomic alterations in H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 histone marks near the PPARα transcription start site. Our findings indicated that offspring from obese rat dams have detrimental alternations to circadian machinery that may contribute to impaired liver metabolism in response to HFD, specifically via reduced PPARα expression prior to obesity development.
成年期肥胖风险从受孕时就开始受到程序化影响。在动物模型中,母体肥胖和高脂饮食会影响后代肥胖风险。除其他长期变化外,肥胖大鼠的后代在断奶时会出现高胰岛素血症、肝脂肪变性以及肝脏中脂肪生成基因的表达。然而,导致后代代谢失调的确切潜在机制仍不清楚。我们之前使用过食诱导肥胖的大鼠模型证明,从受孕前到出生暴露于母体肥胖环境,足以使后代肥胖风险增加。与瘦母鼠的后代相比,肥胖母鼠的后代在喂食高脂饮食(HFD)时体重和脂肪量增加更多。由于已知昼夜节律紊乱会对肝脏等代谢活跃组织产生不利影响,我们检验了这样一种假设,即母体肥胖会导致后代肝脏中核心生物钟成分紊乱,进而影响能量代谢。在进行为期短(2周)的HFD挑战后,于出生后第35天检查瘦母鼠和肥胖母鼠的后代。在同时暴露于母体肥胖和HFD的后代中,昼夜节律(CLOCK、BMAL1、REV-ERBα、CRY、PER)和代谢(PPARα、SIRT1)基因的肝脏mRNA表达受到强烈抑制。我们使用数学模型确定了两种调节PPARα mRNA表达的不同生物学机制:i)mRNA合成速率降低;ii)非特异性mRNA降解速率增加。此外,我们的研究结果表明,PPARα转录的变化与PPARα转录起始位点附近H3K4me3和H3K27me3组蛋白标记的表观基因组改变有关。我们的研究结果表明,肥胖母鼠的后代对昼夜节律机制有有害改变,这可能导致对HFD的肝脏代谢受损,特别是在肥胖发展之前通过降低PPARα表达来实现。