Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

High-fat diet during pregnancy promotes fetal skeletal muscle fatty acid oxidation and insulin resistance in an ovine model.

American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology(2023)

Cited 0|Views6
No score
Abstract
Maternal diet during pregnancy is associated with offspring metabolic risk trajectory in humans and animal models, but the prenatal origins of these effects are less clear. We examined the effects of a high-fat diet (HFD) during pregnancy on fetal skeletal muscle metabolism and metabolic risk parameters using an ovine model. White-faced ewes were fed a standardized diet containing 5% fat wt/wt (CON), or the same diet supplemented with 6% rumen-protected fats (11% total fat wt/wt; HFD) beginning 2 wk before mating until midgestation (GD75). Maternal HFD increased maternal weight gain, fetal body weight, and low-density lipoprotein levels in the uterine and umbilical circulation but had no significant effects on circulating glucose, triglycerides, or placental fatty acid transporters. Fatty acid (palmitoylcarnitine) oxidation capacity of permeabilized hindlimb muscle fibers was >50% higher in fetuses from HFD pregnancies, whereas pyruvate and maximal (mixed substrate) oxidation capacities were similar to CON. This corresponded to greater triacylglycerol content and protein expression of fatty acid transport and oxidation enzymes in fetal muscle but no significant effect on respiratory chain complexes or pyruvate dehydrogenase expression. However, serine-308 phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 was greater in fetal muscle from HFD pregnancies along with c-jun-NH2 terminal kinase activation, consistent with prenatal inhibition of skeletal muscle insulin signaling. These results indicate that maternal high-fat feeding shifts fetal skeletal muscle metabolism toward a greater capacity for fatty acid over glucose utilization and favors prenatal development of insulin resistance, which may predispose offspring to metabolic syndrome later in life.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Maternal diet during pregnancy is associated with offspring metabolic risk trajectory in humans and animal models, but the prenatal origins of these effects are less clear. This study examined the effects of a high-fat diet during pregnancy on metabolic risk parameters using a new sheep model. Results align with findings previously reported in nonhuman primates, demonstrating changes in fetal skeletal muscle metabolism that may predispose offspring to metabolic syndrome later in life.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined