Wang Kimberley C W, Botting Kimberley J, Zhang Song, McMillen I Caroline, Brooks Doug A, Morrison Janna L
Early Origins of Adult Health Research GroupSchool of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, Sansom Institute for Health Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Mechanisms in Cell Biology and Disease Research GroupSchool of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, Sansom Institute for Health Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
J Endocrinol. 2017 May;233(2):R81-R94. doi: 10.1530/JOE-17-0039. Epub 2017 Feb 20.
Intrauterine insults, such as poor nutrition and placental insufficiency, can alter cardiomyocyte development, and this can have significant long-term implications for heart health. Consequently, epidemiological studies have shown that low-birth-weight babies have an increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease in adult life. In addition, intrauterine growth restriction can result in increased left ventricular hypertrophy, which is the strongest predictor for poor health outcomes in cardiac patients. The mechanisms responsible for these associations are not clear, but a suboptimal intrauterine environment can program alternative expression of genes such as cardiac IGF-2/H19, IGF-2R and ATR through either an increase or decrease in DNA methylation or histone acetylation at specific loci. Furthermore, hypoxia and other intrauterine insults can also activate the IGF-1 receptor via IGF-1 and IGF-2, and the AT receptor via angiotensin signaling pathways; both of which can result in the phosphorylation of Akt and the activation of a range of downstream pathways. In turn, Akt activation can increase cardiac angiogenesis and cardiomyocyte apoptosis and promote a reversion of metabolism in postnatal life to a fetal phenotype, which involves increased reliance on glucose. Cardiac Akt can also be indirectly regulated by microRNAs and conversely can target microRNAs that will eventually affect other specific cardiac genes and proteins. This review aims to discuss our understanding of this complex network of interactions, which may help explain the link between low birth weight and the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in adult life.
子宫内的不良因素,如营养不良和胎盘功能不全,会改变心肌细胞的发育,这可能对心脏健康产生重大的长期影响。因此,流行病学研究表明,低体重出生的婴儿在成年后死于心血管疾病的风险会增加。此外,子宫内生长受限会导致左心室肥厚增加,这是心脏病患者健康状况不佳的最强预测因素。造成这些关联的机制尚不清楚,但子宫内环境欠佳可通过特定基因座处DNA甲基化或组蛋白乙酰化的增加或减少,对诸如心脏IGF-2/H19、IGF-2R和ATR等基因的交替表达进行编程。此外,缺氧和其他子宫内不良因素也可通过IGF-1和IGF-2激活IGF-1受体,并通过血管紧张素信号通路激活AT受体;这两者均可导致Akt磷酸化并激活一系列下游通路。反过来,Akt激活可增加心脏血管生成和心肌细胞凋亡,并促使出生后代谢恢复为胎儿表型,这涉及对葡萄糖的依赖性增加。心脏Akt也可受到微小RNA的间接调控,反之,它也可靶向微小RNA,最终影响其他特定的心脏基因和蛋白质。本综述旨在探讨我们对这一复杂相互作用网络的理解,这可能有助于解释低出生体重与成年后心血管疾病风险增加之间的联系。