Department of Nutrition, CB# 7461, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7461, USA.
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, CB#7431, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7431, USA.
Arch Toxicol. 2021 Feb;95(2):473-488. doi: 10.1007/s00204-020-02941-w. Epub 2020 Nov 3.
Chronic exposure to inorganic arsenic (iAs) has been linked to diabetic phenotypes in both humans and mice. However, diabetogenic effects of iAs exposure during specific developmental windows have never been systematically studied. We have previously shown that in mice, combined preconception and in utero exposures to iAs resulted in impaired glucose homeostasis in male offspring. The goal of the present study was to determine if preconception exposure alone can contribute to this outcome. We have examined metabolic phenotypes in male and female offspring from dams and sires that were exposed to iAs in drinking water (0 or 200 μg As/L) for 10 weeks prior to mating. The effects of iAs exposure on gene expression profiles in parental germ cells, and pancreatic islets and livers from offspring were assessed using RNA sequencing. We found that iAs exposure significantly altered transcript levels of genes, including diabetes-related genes, in the sperm of sires. Notably, some of the same gene transcripts and the associated pathways were also altered in the liver of the offspring. The exposure had a more subtle effect on gene expression in maternal oocytes and in pancreatic islets of the offspring. In female offspring, the preconception exposure was associated with increased adiposity, but lower blood glucose after fasting and after glucose challenge. HOMA-IR, the indicator of insulin resistance, was also lower. In contrast, the preconception exposure had no effects on blood glucose measures in male offspring. However, males from parents exposed to iAs had higher plasma insulin after glucose challenge and higher insulinogenic index than control offspring, indicating a greater requirement for insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis. Our results suggest that preconception exposure may contribute to the development of diabetic phenotype in male offspring, possibly mediated through germ cell-associated inheritance. Future research can investigate role of epigenetics in this phenomenon. The paradoxical outcomes in female offspring, suggesting a protective effect of the preconception exposure, warrant further investigation.
慢性接触无机砷(iAs)已被证明与人类和小鼠的糖尿病表型有关。然而,iAs 暴露在特定发育窗口对糖尿病的影响从未被系统研究过。我们之前的研究表明,在小鼠中,受孕前和子宫内同时暴露于 iAs 会导致雄性后代葡萄糖稳态受损。本研究的目的是确定单独受孕前暴露是否会导致这种结果。我们检查了来自母鼠和父鼠的雄性和雌性后代的代谢表型,这些母鼠和父鼠在交配前 10 周连续通过饮水暴露于 iAs(0 或 200μg As/L)。使用 RNA 测序评估 iAs 暴露对亲代生殖细胞、后代胰腺胰岛和肝脏的基因表达谱的影响。我们发现,iAs 暴露显著改变了精子中包括与糖尿病相关的基因在内的基因的转录水平。值得注意的是,一些相同的基因转录本和相关途径也在后代的肝脏中发生了改变。这种暴露对母鼠卵母细胞和后代胰腺胰岛中的基因表达的影响更为微妙。在雌性后代中,受孕前的暴露与肥胖增加有关,但空腹和葡萄糖负荷后血糖较低。胰岛素抵抗的指标 HOMA-IR 也较低。相比之下,受孕前的暴露对雄性后代的血糖测量没有影响。然而,来自暴露于 iAs 的父母的雄性后代在葡萄糖负荷后具有更高的血浆胰岛素和更高的胰岛素生成指数,表明维持葡萄糖稳态需要更多的胰岛素。我们的研究结果表明,受孕前的暴露可能导致雄性后代糖尿病表型的发展,这可能通过生殖细胞相关遗传来介导。未来的研究可以调查这种现象中的表观遗传学作用。在雌性后代中出现的矛盾结果表明受孕前暴露具有保护作用,这值得进一步研究。