Diniz Fabiola, Edgington-Giordano Francesca, El-Dahr Samir S, Tortelote Giovane G
Section of Pediatric Nephrology, Department of Pediatrics, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, 70112, USA.
Mol Cell Pediatr. 2024 Oct 16;11(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s40348-024-00184-8.
Parental malnutrition, particularly a low-protein diet (LPD), causes oligonephropathy at birth and predisposes offspring to hypertension and chronic kidney disease later in life. The onset of adult kidney disease varies based on genetics and environmental factors, often with subclinical alterations in kidney function being overlooked. This study aimed to examine changes in kidney morphology before significant kidney function decline in the offspring of mice fed a low-protein diet.
Using a combination of histological analysis, kidney metabolic and hemodynamic panel assessments, and advanced statistical techniques such as Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) and Principal Component Analysis (PCA), we investigated the initial impact of a maternal low-protein diet (LPD) on kidney development and function. Our study utilized 12-week-old F1 mice from F0 parents fed either a low-protein diet (LPD) or a normal-protein diet (NPD) before the onset of hypertension.
The offspring (F1 generation) of parents (F0 generation) fed an LPD show reduced body weight from birth to P20. The kidney weight was also reduced compared to F1 offspring from parents fed an NPD. At 12 weeks of age, body weight normalized, but kidney weight remained low. Offspring of parents fed an LPD displayed abnormal kidney morphology, including dilated tubules, oligonephropathy, and fluid-filled cysts which had worsened with age. A kidney metabolic panel analysis at 12 weeks revealed a slight but consistent increase in urine albumin, plasma creatinine, mean urea, and BUN concentrations. Although no significant changes in hemodynamic variables were observed, 2/12 mice, both males, showed alterations in systolic blood pressure, suggesting sex-specific effects when comparing F1 mice from F0 fed either diet. Overall, kidney metabolic changes were strongly correlated to parental LPD.
Our findings indicate that significant kidney damage must accumulate in the F1 generation from parents fed an LPD before any detectable changes in blood pressure occur. Our study suggests that small variations in kidney metabolic function may point to early kidney damage and should not be overlooked in the offspring of these malnourished mice and likely humans.
父母营养不良,尤其是低蛋白饮食(LPD),会导致子代出生时肾单位减少,并使其在成年后易患高血压和慢性肾病。成年肾病的发病因遗传和环境因素而异,肾功能的亚临床改变常常被忽视。本研究旨在检查低蛋白饮食喂养的小鼠子代在肾功能显著下降之前肾脏形态的变化。
我们结合组织学分析、肾脏代谢和血流动力学指标评估以及线性判别分析(LDA)和主成分分析(PCA)等先进统计技术,研究母体低蛋白饮食(LPD)对肾脏发育和功能的初始影响。我们的研究使用了12周龄的F1小鼠,其F0代亲本在高血压发病前分别喂食低蛋白饮食(LPD)或正常蛋白饮食(NPD)。
喂食LPD的亲本(F0代)的子代(F1代)从出生到P20体重减轻。与喂食NPD的亲本的F1代子代相比,肾脏重量也减轻。在12周龄时,体重恢复正常,但肾脏重量仍然较低。喂食LPD的亲本的子代表现出异常的肾脏形态,包括肾小管扩张、肾单位减少和充满液体的囊肿,且随着年龄增长情况恶化。12周时的肾脏代谢指标分析显示,尿白蛋白、血浆肌酐、平均尿素和尿素氮浓度略有但持续升高。虽然未观察到血流动力学变量有显著变化,但12只小鼠中有2只雄性小鼠收缩压出现改变,这表明在比较两种饮食喂养的F0代的F1小鼠时存在性别特异性影响。总体而言,肾脏代谢变化与亲本LPD密切相关。
我们的研究结果表明,在血压出现任何可检测到的变化之前,喂食LPD的亲本的F1代必定已经积累了显著的肾脏损伤。我们的研究表明,肾脏代谢功能的微小变化可能表明早期肾脏损伤,在这些营养不良的小鼠以及可能的人类子代中不应被忽视。