Kim Youn-Kyung, Zuccaro Michael V, Zhang Changqing, Sarkar Dipak, Quadro Loredana
1 Department of Food Science, Rutgers Center for Lipid Research, 2 Department of Animal Sciences and Endocrine Research Program, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2015 Aug;4(4):268-77. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2304-3881.2015.01.06.
Maternal alcohol exposure and adult alcohol intake have been shown to perturb the metabolism of various micro- and macro-nutrients, including vitamin A and its derivatives (retinoids). Therefore, it has been hypothesized that the well-known detrimental consequences of alcohol consumption may be due to deregulations of the metabolism of such nutrients rather than to a direct effect of alcohol. Alcohol exposure in utero also has long-term harmful consequences on the health of the offspring with mechanisms that have not been fully clarified. Disruption of tissue retinoid homeostasis has been linked not only to abnormal embryonic development, but also to various adult pathological conditions, including cancer, metabolic disorders and abnormal lung function. We hypothesized that prenatal alcohol exposure may permanently perturb tissue retinoid metabolism, predisposing the offspring to adult chronic diseases.
Serum and tissues (liver, lung and prostate from males; liver and lung from females) were collected from 60-75 day-old sprague dawley rats born from dams that were: (I) fed a liquid diet containing 6.7% alcohol between gestational day 7 and 21; or (II) pair-fed with isocaloric liquid diet during the same gestational window; or (III) fed ad libitum with regular rat chow diet throughout pregnancy. Serum and tissue retinoid levels were analyzed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Serum retinol-binding protein (RBP) levels were measured by western blot analysis, and liver, lung and prostate mRNA levels of lecithin-retinol acyltransferase (LRAT) were measured by qPCR.
Retinyl ester levels were significantly reduced in the lung of both males and females, as well as in the liver and ventral prostate of males born from alcohol-fed dams. Tissue LRAT mRNA levels remained unchanged upon maternal alcohol treatment.
Prenatal alcohol exposure in rats affects retinoid metabolism in adult life, in a tissue- and sex-dependent manner. We propose that the alcohol-induced perturbations of vitamin A metabolism may predispose to detrimental consequnces on adult health.
已表明孕期母亲饮酒及成年后饮酒会扰乱多种微量和常量营养素的代谢,包括维生素A及其衍生物(类视黄醇)。因此,有人提出饮酒产生的众所周知的有害后果可能是由于此类营养素代谢失调,而非酒精的直接作用。子宫内酒精暴露对后代健康也有长期有害影响,但其机制尚未完全阐明。组织类视黄醇稳态的破坏不仅与胚胎发育异常有关,还与多种成年期病理状况有关,包括癌症、代谢紊乱和肺功能异常。我们推测产前酒精暴露可能会永久性扰乱组织类视黄醇代谢,使后代易患成年期慢性疾病。
从60 - 75日龄的斯普拉格 - 道利大鼠收集血清和组织(雄性大鼠的肝脏、肺和前列腺;雌性大鼠的肝脏和肺),这些大鼠的母亲分为以下几组:(I)在妊娠第7天至21天期间喂食含6.7%酒精的液体饮食;或(II)在同一妊娠窗口期与等热量液体饮食配对喂养;或(III)在整个孕期自由采食常规大鼠饲料。通过反相高效液相色谱法(HPLC)分析血清和组织类视黄醇水平。通过蛋白质印迹分析测量血清视黄醇结合蛋白(RBP)水平,通过定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR)测量肝脏、肺和前列腺中卵磷脂 - 视黄醇酰基转移酶(LRAT)的mRNA水平。
在酒精喂养母鼠所生的雄性和雌性大鼠的肺中,以及雄性大鼠的肝脏和腹侧前列腺中,视黄酯水平显著降低。母体酒精处理后,组织LRAT mRNA水平保持不变。
大鼠产前酒精暴露以组织和性别依赖的方式影响成年期类视黄醇代谢。我们认为酒精诱导的维生素A代谢紊乱可能易导致对成年健康的有害后果。