Sanchez-Garrido Miguel Angel, Ruiz-Pino Francisco, Velasco Inmaculada, Barroso Alexia, Fernandois Daniela, Heras Violeta, Manfredi-Lozano Maria, Vazquez Maria Jesus, Castellano Juan Manuel, Roa Juan, Pinilla Leonor, Tena-Sempere Manuel
Instituto Maimónides de Investigación Biomédica de Cordoba, University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain.
Department of Cell Biology, Physiology, and Immunology, University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain.
Endocrinology. 2018 Feb 1;159(2):1005-1018. doi: 10.1210/en.2017-00705.
Obesity and its comorbidities are reaching epidemic proportions worldwide. Maternal obesity is known to predispose the offspring to metabolic disorders, independently of genetic inheritance. This intergenerational transmission has also been suggested for paternal obesity, with a potential negative impact on the metabolic and, eventually, reproductive health of the offspring, likely via epigenetic changes in spermatozoa. However, the neuroendocrine component of such phenomenon and whether paternal obesity sensitizes the offspring to the disturbances induced by high-fat diet (HFD) remain poorly defined. We report in this work the metabolic and reproductive impact of HFD in the offspring from obese fathers, with attention to potential sex differences and alterations of hypothalamic Kiss1 system. Lean and obese male rats were mated with lean virgin female rats; male and female offspring were fed HFD from weaning onward and analyzed at adulthood. The increases in body weight and leptin levels, but not glucose intolerance, induced by HFD were significantly augmented in the male, but not female, offspring from obese fathers. Paternal obesity caused a decrease in luteinizing hormone (LH) levels and exacerbated the drop in circulating testosterone and gene expression of its key biosynthetic enzymes caused by HFD in the male offspring. LH responses to central kisspeptin-10 administration were also suppressed in HFD males from obese fathers. In contrast, paternal obesity did not significantly alter gonadotropin levels in the female offspring fed HFD, although these females displayed reduced LH responses to kisspeptin-10. Our findings suggest that HFD-induced metabolic and reproductive disturbances are exacerbated by paternal obesity preferentially in males, whereas kisspeptin effects are affected in both sexes.
肥胖及其合并症在全球正呈流行趋势。众所周知,母体肥胖会使后代易患代谢紊乱,且与遗传因素无关。父体肥胖也被认为存在这种代际传递现象,可能通过精子的表观遗传变化对后代的代谢乃至生殖健康产生潜在负面影响。然而,这种现象的神经内分泌成分以及父体肥胖是否会使后代对高脂饮食(HFD)引起的干扰更敏感,目前仍不清楚。我们在这项研究中报告了高脂饮食对肥胖父体后代的代谢和生殖影响,重点关注潜在的性别差异以及下丘脑Kiss1系统的改变。将瘦型和肥胖型雄性大鼠与瘦型未交配过的雌性大鼠交配;雄性和雌性后代从断奶后开始喂食高脂饮食,并在成年时进行分析。高脂饮食引起的体重和瘦素水平升高,但不包括葡萄糖不耐受,在肥胖父体的雄性后代中显著增加,而雌性后代中则没有。父体肥胖导致雄性后代促黄体生成素(LH)水平下降,并加剧了高脂饮食引起的循环睾酮水平下降及其关键生物合成酶的基因表达减少。肥胖父体的高脂饮食雄性大鼠对中枢给予吻肽素 - 10的LH反应也受到抑制。相比之下,父体肥胖对喂食高脂饮食的雌性后代的促性腺激素水平没有显著影响,尽管这些雌性对吻肽素 - 10的LH反应有所降低。我们的研究结果表明,高脂饮食引起的代谢和生殖干扰在父体肥胖的情况下,雄性后代受到的影响更为明显,而吻肽素的作用在两性中均受到影响。