Jousse Céline, Muranishi Yuki, Parry Laurent, Montaurier Christophe, Even Patrick, Launay Jean-Marie, Carraro Valérie, Maurin Anne-Catherine, Averous Julien, Chaveroux Cédric, Bruhat Alain, Mallet Jacques, Morio Béatrice, Fafournoux Pierre
UMR1019 Nutrition Humaine, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Université Clermont 1, Saint Genès Champanelle, France.
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), AgroParisTech, UMR914 Nutrition Physiology and Ingestive Behavior, Paris, France.
PLoS One. 2014 Aug 13;9(8):e104896. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0104896. eCollection 2014.
Epidemiological findings indicate that transient environmental influences during perinatal life, especially nutrition, may have deleterious heritable health effects lasting for the entire life. Indeed, the fetal organism develops specific adaptations that permanently change its physiology/metabolism and that persist even in the absence of the stimulus that initiated them. This process is termed "nutritional programming". We previously demonstrated that mothers fed a Low-Protein-Diet (LPD) during gestation and lactation give birth to F1-LPD animals presenting metabolic consequences that are different from those observed when the nutritional stress is applied during gestation only. Compared to control mice, adult F1-LPD animals have a lower body weight and exhibit a higher food intake suggesting that maternal protein under-nutrition during gestation and lactation affects the energy metabolism of F1-LPD offspring. In this study, we investigated the origin of this apparent energy wasting process in F1-LPD and demonstrated that minimal energy expenditure is increased, due to both an increased mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle and an increased mitochondrial density in White Adipose Tissue. Importantly, F1-LPD mice are protected against high-fat-diet-induced obesity. Clearly, different paradigms of exposure to malnutrition may be associated with differences in energy expenditure, food intake, weight and different susceptibilities to various symptoms associated with metabolic syndrome. Taken together these results demonstrate that intra-uterine environment is a major contributor to the future of individuals and disturbance at a critical period of development may compromise their health. Consequently, understanding the molecular mechanisms may give access to useful knowledge regarding the onset of metabolic diseases.
流行病学研究结果表明,围产期的短暂环境影响,尤其是营养,可能会对健康产生有害的遗传影响,并持续一生。事实上,胎儿机体形成了特定的适应性变化,永久性地改变其生理/代谢,即使在引发这些变化的刺激因素不存在时,这些变化依然持续存在。这个过程被称为“营养编程”。我们之前证明,在妊娠和哺乳期喂食低蛋白饮食(LPD)的母鼠所生的F1-LPD动物呈现出的代谢后果,与仅在妊娠期施加营养应激时所观察到的不同。与对照小鼠相比,成年F1-LPD动物体重较低,食物摄入量较高,这表明妊娠和哺乳期母体蛋白质营养不足会影响F1-LPD后代的能量代谢。在本研究中,我们调查了F1-LPD中这种明显能量浪费过程的起源,并证明由于骨骼肌线粒体功能增强和白色脂肪组织中线粒体密度增加,最小能量消耗增加。重要的是,F1-LPD小鼠对高脂饮食诱导的肥胖具有抵抗力。显然,不同的营养不良暴露模式可能与能量消耗、食物摄入量、体重的差异以及对与代谢综合征相关的各种症状的不同易感性有关。综合这些结果表明,子宫内环境是个体未来健康的主要影响因素,发育关键期的干扰可能会损害他们的健康。因此,了解分子机制可能会获得有关代谢疾病发病的有用知识。