Gyllenhammer Lauren E, Boyle Kristen E
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.
Section of Nutrition, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA.
Curr Obes Rep. 2025 Jan 16;14(1):10. doi: 10.1007/s13679-024-00599-4.
To review evidence supporting human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSC) as an innovative model system advancing obesity precision medicine.
Obesity prevalence is increasing rapidly and exposures during fetal development can impact individual susceptibility to obesity. UC-MSCs exhibit heterogeneous phenotypes associated with maternal exposures and predictive of child cardiometabolic outcomes. This recent evidence supports UC-MSCs as a precision model serving three purposes: (1) as a mechanistic tool to interrogate biological underpinnings of obesity in human studies, (2) as a sensitive index of early life causes and determinants of obesity, and (3) as a marker and transducer of susceptibility, highlighting populations most at risk for future obesity. Data from UC-MSCs emphasize nutrient sensing and lipid partitioning as phenotypes most relevant to neonatal and early childhood adiposity and implicate a role for these cell-autonomous features of mesodermal tissues in the biological underpinnings of obesity.
回顾支持人脐带间充质干细胞(UC-MSC)作为推进肥胖精准医学的创新模型系统的证据。
肥胖患病率正在迅速上升,胎儿发育期间的暴露可能会影响个体对肥胖的易感性。UC-MSCs表现出与母体暴露相关的异质表型,并可预测儿童心脏代谢结局。这一最新证据支持UC-MSCs作为一种精准模型,具有三个作用:(1)作为一种机制工具,用于在人体研究中探究肥胖的生物学基础;(2)作为肥胖早期生活原因和决定因素的敏感指标;(3)作为易感性的标志物和转换器,突出未来肥胖风险最高的人群。来自UC-MSCs的数据强调营养感知和脂质分配是与新生儿和幼儿肥胖最相关的表型,并暗示中胚层组织的这些细胞自主特征在肥胖的生物学基础中起作用。