Schneider Jill E, Brozek Jeremy M, Keen-Rhinehart Erin
Lehigh University, Department of Biological Sciences, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA.
Lehigh University, Department of Biological Sciences, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA.
Horm Behav. 2014 Jun;66(1):104-19. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2014.03.011. Epub 2014 Mar 28.
This article is part of a Special Issue "Energy Balance". The prevalence of adult obesity has risen markedly in the last quarter of the 20th century and has not been reversed in this century. Less well known is the fact that obesity prevalence has risen in domestic, laboratory, and feral animals, suggesting that all of these species have been exposed to obesogenic factors present in the environment. This review emphasizes interactions among three biological processes known to influence energy balance: Sexual differentiation, endocrine disruption, and maternal programming. Sexual dimorphisms include differences between males and females in body weight, adiposity, adipose tissue distribution, ingestive behavior, and the underlying neural circuits. These sexual dimorphisms are controlled by sex chromosomes, hormones that masculinize or feminize adult body weight during perinatal development, and hormones that act during later periods of development, such as puberty. Endocrine disruptors are natural and synthetic molecules that attenuate or block normal hormonal action during these same developmental periods. A growing body of research documents effects of endocrine disruptors on the differentiation of adipocytes and the central nervous system circuits that control food intake, energy expenditure, and adipose tissue storage. In parallel, interest has grown in epigenetic influences, including maternal programming, the process by which the mother's experience has permanent effects on energy-balancing traits in the offspring. This review highlights the points at which maternal programming, sexual differentiation, and endocrine disruption might dovetail to influence global changes in energy balancing traits.
本文是《能量平衡》特刊的一部分。在20世纪最后25年中,成人肥胖率显著上升,且在本世纪仍未得到扭转。鲜为人知的是,家养动物、实验动物和野生动物的肥胖率也有所上升,这表明所有这些物种都接触到了环境中存在的致肥胖因素。本综述着重探讨已知影响能量平衡的三个生物学过程之间的相互作用:性别分化、内分泌干扰和母体编程。性别二态性包括雄性和雌性在体重、肥胖程度、脂肪组织分布、摄食行为以及潜在神经回路方面的差异。这些性别二态性由性染色体、在围产期发育过程中使成年体重男性化或女性化的激素,以及在发育后期(如青春期)起作用的激素控制。内分泌干扰物是在相同发育阶段减弱或阻断正常激素作用的天然和合成分子。越来越多的研究记录了内分泌干扰物对脂肪细胞分化以及控制食物摄入、能量消耗和脂肪组织储存的中枢神经系统回路的影响。与此同时,人们对表观遗传影响的兴趣也在增加,包括母体编程,即母亲的经历对后代能量平衡特征产生永久影响的过程。本综述强调了母体编程、性别分化和内分泌干扰可能相互关联从而影响能量平衡特征全球变化的关键点。