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Maternal Obesity and Malnutrition in Rats Differentially Affect Glucose Sensing in the Muscles and Adipose Tissues in the Offspring
Update time:2019-04-15 10:49:00   【 Font: Large  Medium Small

Abstract:
Background: The altered maternal/fetal metabolism appears to be associated with a diabetogenic effect in the adult offspring even in  the absence of genetic predisposition.
Aim:The study aimed to investigate the effect of maternal obesity and malnutrition on the peripheral glucose sensing and mitochondria biogenesis in F1 offspring. Effect of postnatal diet was also evaluated.   
Methods:  Three groups of female Wistar rats were used (control, obese and malnourished). After the pregnancy and delivery the offspring were weaned to control diet or high-caloric (HCD) diet and followed up for 30 weeks.
Every 5 weeks OGTT was constructed and serum and tissues were obtained for assessment of glucose homeostasis parameters, mTFA, mtDNA, UCP2, insulin receptor (IR), phospho-insulin receptor (Phosho-IR) and GLUT4. 
Results:  The results indicated that maternal obesity impair  glucose tolerance and sensing in the offspring from the 15th week of age even under control diet and the situation is worse under HCD these defects were precede by significant decline in mtDNA copy number in muscle and adipose tissues as early as 5th week of age . The
offspring of malnourished mothers show normal and even better glucose tolerance and sensing and normal mtDNA copy number under control  diet, while those offspring under HCD show impaired glucose sensing and tolerance only at older age than obese group.    
Conclusion: maternal obesity and malnutrition differentially affect glucose sensing and tolerance, mtDNA copy number and the expression of genes involved in the mitochondrial biogenesis and function in the muscles and adipose tissues in the F1 offspring with the postnatal feeding appears to play a central role in these differential effects. The male F1 offspring appear to be more sensitive for fetal diabetogenic
programming than female offspring.

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Source:International Journal of Biochemistry Research & Review      by MA Kamel, MH Helmy, MY Hanafi, et al.
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