Metabolic Research Laboratories and MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit, Wellcome Trust-MRC Institute of Metabolic Science, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge, UK.
Nat Metab. 2022 May;4(5):507-523. doi: 10.1038/s42255-022-00570-4. Epub 2022 May 30.
Strong evidence suggests that early-life exposures to suboptimal environmental factors, including those in utero, influence our long-term metabolic health. This has been termed developmental programming. Mounting evidence suggests that the growth and metabolism of male and female fetuses differ. Therefore, sexual dimorphism in response to pre-conception or early-life exposures could contribute to known sex differences in susceptibility to poor metabolic health in adulthood. However, until recently, many studies, especially those in animal models, focused on a single sex, or, often in the case of studies performed during intrauterine development, did not report the sex of the animal at all. In this review, we (a) summarize the evidence that male and females respond differently to a suboptimal pre-conceptional or in utero environment, (b) explore the potential biological mechanisms that underlie these differences and (c) review the consequences of these differences for long-term metabolic health, including that of subsequent generations.
强有力的证据表明,生命早期暴露于不理想的环境因素(包括宫内环境因素)会影响我们的长期代谢健康。这被称为发育编程。越来越多的证据表明,男性和女性胎儿的生长和代谢存在差异。因此,对受孕前或生命早期暴露的反应存在性别二态性,可能导致成年后对代谢健康不良的易感性存在已知的性别差异。然而,直到最近,许多研究,尤其是动物模型中的研究,仅关注单一性别,或者在宫内发育期间进行的研究中,根本没有报告动物的性别。在这篇综述中,我们(a)总结了男性和女性对不理想的受孕前或宫内环境的反应不同的证据,(b)探讨了这些差异的潜在生物学机制,以及(c)回顾了这些差异对长期代谢健康的影响,包括对后代的影响。