Department of Biological Sciences, Center for Human Health and the Environment, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695.
Toxicol Sci. 2020 Dec 1;178(2):264-280. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfaa154.
There is compelling evidence that developmental exposure to toxic metals increases risk for obesity and obesity-related morbidity including cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. To explore the hypothesis that developmental Cd exposure increases risk of obesity later in life, male, and female CD-1 mice were maternally exposed to 500 ppb CdCl2 in drinking water during a human gestational equivalent period (gestational day 0-postnatal day 10 [GD0-PND10]). Hallmark indicators of metabolic disruption, hepatic steatosis, and metabolic syndrome were evaluated prior to birth through adulthood. Maternal blood Cd levels were similar to those observed in human pregnancy cohorts, and Cd was undetected in adult offspring. There were no observed impacts of exposure on dams or pregnancy-related outcomes. Results of glucose and insulin tolerance testing revealed that Cd exposure impaired offspring glucose homeostasis on PND42. Exposure-related increases in circulating triglycerides and hepatic steatosis were apparent only in females. By PND120, Cd-exposed females were 30% heavier with 700% more perigonadal fat than unexposed control females. There was no evidence of dyslipidemia, steatosis, increased weight gain, nor increased adiposity in Cd-exposed male offspring. Hepatic transcriptome analysis on PND1, PND21, and PND42 revealed evidence for female-specific increases in oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction with significant early disruption of retinoic acid signaling and altered insulin receptor signaling consistent with hepatic insulin sensitivity in adult females. The observed steatosis and metabolic syndrome-like phenotypes resulting from exposure to 500 ppb CdCl2 during the pre- and perinatal period of development equivalent to human gestation indicate that Cd acts developmentally as a sex-specific delayed obesogen.
有确凿的证据表明,发育过程中接触有毒金属会增加肥胖和肥胖相关疾病的风险,包括心血管疾病和 2 型糖尿病。为了探索发育性镉暴露增加晚年肥胖风险的假设,雄性和雌性 CD-1 小鼠在母体饮水中暴露于 500ppb CdCl2,相当于人类妊娠期(妊娠第 0 天-产后第 10 天[GD0-PND10])。在出生前到成年期间,评估了代谢紊乱、肝脂肪变性和代谢综合征的标志性指标。母体血液中的 Cd 水平与人类妊娠队列中的观察结果相似,而成年后代中未检测到 Cd。暴露对母体或与妊娠相关的结果没有观察到影响。葡萄糖和胰岛素耐量测试的结果表明,暴露使后代在 PND42 时的葡萄糖稳态受损。仅在雌性中观察到与暴露相关的循环甘油三酯和肝脂肪变性增加。到 PND120 时,暴露于 Cd 的雌性比未暴露于对照雌性重 30%,周围脂肪多 700%。暴露于 Cd 的雄性后代没有证据表明存在血脂异常、脂肪变性、体重增加或肥胖增加。PND1、PND21 和 PND42 的肝转录组分析显示,雌性特异性氧化应激和线粒体功能障碍增加的证据,以及视黄酸信号的早期中断和胰岛素受体信号的改变,与成年雌性的肝胰岛素敏感性一致。在相当于人类妊娠的发育前和围产期暴露于 500ppb CdCl2 导致的肝脂肪变性和代谢综合征样表型表明,Cd 作为一种性别特异性的延迟肥胖物在发育过程中起作用。