Offspring of mothers fed a high fat diet display hepatic cell cycle inhibition and associated changes in gene expression and DNA methylation


Autoria(s): Dudley, Kevin J.; Sloboda, Deborah M.; Connor, Kristin L.; Beltrand, Jacques; Vickers, Mark H.
Data(s)

11/07/2011

Resumo

The association between an adverse early life environment and increased susceptibility to later-life metabolic disorders such as obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease is described by the developmental origins of health and disease hypothesis. Employing a rat model of maternal high fat (MHF) nutrition, we recently reported that offspring born to MHF mothers are small at birth and develop a postnatal phenotype that closely resembles that of the human metabolic syndrome. Livers of offspring born to MHF mothers also display a fatty phenotype reflecting hepatic steatosis and characteristics of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. In the present study we hypothesised that a MHF diet leads to altered regulation of liver development in offspring; a derangement that may be detectable during early postnatal life. Livers were collected at postnatal days 2 (P2) and 27 (P27) from male offspring of control and MHF mothers (n = 8 per group). Cell cycle dynamics, measured by flow cytometry, revealed significant G0/G1 arrest in the livers of P2 offspring born to MHF mothers, associated with an increased expression of the hepatic cell cycle inhibitor Cdkn1a. In P2 livers, Cdkn1a was hypomethylated at specific CpG dinucleotides and first exon in offspring of MHF mothers and was shown to correlate with a demonstrable increase in mRNA expression levels. These modifications at P2 preceded observable reductions in liver weight and liver:brain weight ratio at P27, but there were no persistent changes in cell cycle dynamics or DNA methylation in MHF offspring at this time. Since Cdkn1a up-regulation has been associated with hepatocyte growth in pathologic states, our data may be suggestive of early hepatic dysfunction in neonates born to high fat fed mothers. It is likely that these offspring are predisposed to long-term hepatic dysfunction.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/75091/

Publicador

Public Library of Science

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/75091/1/PLoS_ONE_2011_Dudley.pdf

DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0021662

Dudley, Kevin J., Sloboda, Deborah M., Connor, Kristin L., Beltrand, Jacques, & Vickers, Mark H. (2011) Offspring of mothers fed a high fat diet display hepatic cell cycle inhibition and associated changes in gene expression and DNA methylation. PL o S ONE, 6(7), e21662.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 please consult author(s)

Fonte

School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Institute for Future Environments; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #060000 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES #060404 Epigenetics (incl. Genome Methylation and Epigenomics) #060602 Animal Physiology - Cell #cell cycle #cell division #DNA methylation #diet #epigenetics #fatty liver #gene expression #hepatocytes
Tipo

Journal Article