Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 1S6, Canada.
Centre for Cell Biology, Development and Disease, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada.
Biol Sex Differ. 2021 Feb 9;12(1):21. doi: 10.1186/s13293-021-00365-4.
Males and females may experience different effects of early-life adversity on life-long health. One hypothesis is that male foetuses invest more in foetal growth and relatively less in placental growth, and that this makes them susceptible to poor nutrition in utero, particularly if nutrition is reduced part-way through gestation.
Our objectives were to examine whether (1) food and/ or protein restriction in rats and mice has consistent sex-dependent effects, (2) sex-dependency differs between types of outcomes, and (3) males are more severely affected when restriction starts part-way through gestation.
PubMed and Web of Science were searched to identify eligible studies.
Eligible studies described controlled experiments that restricted protein or food during gestation in rats or mice, examined physiological traits in offspring from manipulated pregnancies, and tested whether effects differed between males and females.
Our search identified 292 articles, of which the full texts of 72 were assessed, and 65 were included for further synthesis. A majority (50) used Wistar or Sprague-Dawley rats and so these were the primary focus. Among studies in which maternal diet was restricted for the duration of gestation, no type of trait was consistently more severely affected in one particular sex, although blood pressure was generally increased in both sexes. Meta-analysis found no difference between sexes in the effect of protein restriction throughout gestation on blood pressure. Among studies restricting food in the latter half of gestation only, there were again few consistent sex-dependent effects, although three studies found blood pressure was increased in males only. Meta-analysis found that food restriction in the second half of gestation increased adult blood pressure in both sexes, with a significantly greater effect in males. Birthweight was consistently reduced in both sexes, a result confirmed by meta-analysis.
We found little support for the hypotheses that males are more affected by food and protein restriction, or that effects are particularly severe if nutrition is reduced part-way through gestation. However, less than half of the studies tested for sex by maternal diet interactions to identify sex-dependent effects. As a result, many reported sex-specific effects may be false positives.
男性和女性可能会受到不同的早期生活逆境对终生健康的影响。一种假设是,男性胎儿在胎儿生长上投入更多,而在胎盘生长上投入相对较少,这使他们容易受到子宫内营养不良的影响,特别是如果营养在妊娠中期减少。
我们的目的是检验(1)在大鼠和小鼠中,食物和/或蛋白质限制是否具有一致的性别依赖性效应,(2)性别依赖性是否因结果类型而异,以及(3)当限制在妊娠中期开始时,雄性受到的影响更严重。
通过 PubMed 和 Web of Science 检索以确定符合条件的研究。
符合条件的研究描述了在大鼠或小鼠中进行的控制性实验,这些实验限制了妊娠期的蛋白质或食物,检查了来自操纵妊娠的后代的生理特征,并测试了这些影响在雄性和雌性之间是否不同。
我们的检索确定了 292 篇文章,其中有 72 篇的全文进行了评估,有 65 篇被纳入进一步综合分析。大多数(50 篇)使用 Wistar 或 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠,因此这些是主要关注对象。在研究中,母体饮食在整个妊娠期受到限制,没有一种特征在特定性别中更严重,尽管两种性别中的血压通常都会升高。荟萃分析发现,在整个妊娠期限制蛋白质对血压的影响在性别之间没有差异。在仅限制妊娠后半期食物的研究中,再次很少有一致的性别依赖性影响,尽管有三项研究发现只有雄性的血压升高。荟萃分析发现,妊娠后半期限制食物会增加两性成年后的血压,对雄性的影响更大。两种性别中的出生体重都一致降低,这一结果通过荟萃分析得到证实。
我们几乎没有发现支持以下假设的证据,即雄性受到食物和蛋白质限制的影响更大,或者如果营养在妊娠中期减少,影响会特别严重。然而,只有不到一半的研究通过母体饮食相互作用来检验性别,以确定性别依赖性影响。因此,许多报告的性别特异性影响可能是假阳性。