Baack Michelle L, Forred Benjamin J, Larsen Tricia D, Jensen Danielle N, Wachal Angela L, Khan Muhammad Ali, Vitiello Peter F
Children's Health Research Center, Sanford Research, Sioux Falls, SD, United States of America.
Department of Internal Medicine, Sanford School of Medicine-University of South Dakota, Sioux Falls, SD, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 12;11(8):e0160818. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160818. eCollection 2016.
Infants born to diabetic or obese mothers are at risk of respiratory distress and persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN), conceivably through fuel-mediated pathogenic mechanisms. Prior research and preventative measures focus on controlling maternal hyperglycemia, but growing evidence suggests a role for additional circulating fuels including lipids. Little is known about the individual or additive effects of a maternal high-fat diet on fetal lung development.
The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a maternal high-fat diet, alone and alongside late-gestation diabetes, on lung alveologenesis and vasculogenesis, as well as to ascertain if consequences persist beyond the perinatal period.
A rat model was used to study lung development in offspring from control, diabetes-exposed, high-fat diet-exposed and combination-exposed pregnancies via morphometric, histologic (alveolarization and vasculogenesis) and physiologic (echocardiography, pulmonary function) analyses at birth and 3 weeks of age. Outcomes were interrogated for diet, diabetes and interaction effect using ANOVA with significance set at p≤0.05. Findings prompted additional mechanistic inquiry of key molecular pathways.
Offspring exposed to maternal diabetes or high-fat diet, alone and in combination, had smaller lungs and larger hearts at birth. High-fat diet-exposed, but not diabetes-exposed offspring, had a higher perinatal death rate and echocardiographic evidence of PPHN at birth. Alveolar mean linear intercept, septal thickness, and airspace area (D2) were not significantly different between the groups; however, markers of lung maturity were. Both diabetes-exposed and diet-exposed offspring expressed more T1α protein, a marker of type I cells. Diet-exposed newborn pups expressed less surfactant protein B and had fewer pulmonary vessels enumerated. Mechanistic inquiry revealed alterations in AKT activation, higher endothelin-1 expression, and an impaired Txnip/VEGF pathway that are important for vessel growth and migration. After 3 weeks, mortality remained highest and static lung compliance and hysteresis were lowest in combination-exposed offspring.
This study emphasizes the effects of a maternal high-fat diet, especially alongside late-gestation diabetes, on pulmonary vasculogenesis, demonstrates adverse consequences beyond the perinatal period and directs attention to mechanistic pathways of interest. Findings provide a foundation for additional investigation of preventative and therapeutic strategies aimed at decreasing pulmonary morbidity in at-risk infants.
糖尿病母亲或肥胖母亲所生的婴儿有发生呼吸窘迫和新生儿持续性肺动脉高压(PPHN)的风险,这可能是通过燃料介导的致病机制导致的。先前的研究和预防措施主要集中在控制母亲的高血糖,但越来越多的证据表明,包括脂质在内的其他循环燃料也发挥了作用。关于母亲高脂饮食对胎儿肺发育的个体影响或累加影响,人们了解甚少。
本研究的目的是确定母亲高脂饮食单独以及与妊娠晚期糖尿病共同作用时,对肺泡形成和血管生成的影响,并确定这些影响在围产期之后是否仍然存在。
采用大鼠模型,通过形态计量学、组织学(肺泡化和血管生成)以及生理学(超声心动图、肺功能)分析,研究对照组、糖尿病暴露组、高脂饮食暴露组和联合暴露组妊娠后代在出生时和3周龄时的肺发育情况。使用方差分析对饮食、糖尿病及交互作用的结果进行分析,显著性设定为p≤0.05。研究结果促使对关键分子途径进行了额外的机制探究。
暴露于母亲糖尿病或高脂饮食单独及联合作用下的后代在出生时肺较小、心脏较大。暴露于高脂饮食而非糖尿病的后代围产期死亡率较高,且出生时超声心动图有PPHN的证据。各组之间的肺泡平均线性截距、间隔厚度和空域面积(D2)无显著差异;然而,肺成熟标志物存在差异。暴露于糖尿病和饮食的后代均表达更多的T1α蛋白,这是I型细胞的标志物。暴露于饮食的新生幼崽表达的表面活性蛋白B较少,且计数的肺血管较少。机制探究揭示了AKT激活的改变、内皮素-1表达升高以及Txnip/VEGF途径受损,这些对血管生长和迁移很重要。3周后,联合暴露的后代死亡率仍然最高,静态肺顺应性和滞后现象最低。
本研究强调了母亲高脂饮食,尤其是与妊娠晚期糖尿病共同作用时,对肺血管生成的影响,证明了围产期之后的不良后果,并将注意力引向了相关的机制途径。研究结果为进一步研究旨在降低高危婴儿肺部发病率的预防和治疗策略奠定了基础。