
Maternal obesity in pregnancy changes the eating behaviours of offspring by increasing long-term levels of particular molecules known as microRNAs in the part of the brain that controls appetite 颅鈥 but this can be changed by exercise during pregnancy, a study in obese mice has suggested.
Maternal obesity in pregnancy changes the eating behaviours of offspring by increasing long-term levels of particular molecules known as microRNAs in the part of the brain that controls appetite 颅鈥 but this can be changed by exercise during pregnancy, a study in obese mice has suggested.
We showed that moderate exercise, without weight loss, during pregnancies complicated by obesity prevented the changes to the baby's brain
Susan Ozanne
Previous studies in both humans and animal models have shown that the offspring of mothers living with obesity have a higher risk of developing obesity and type 2 diabetes themselves when they grow up. While this relationship is likely to be the result of a complex relationship between genetics and environment, emerging evidence has implicated that maternal obesity in pregnancy can disrupt the baby鈥檚 hypothalamus鈥攖he region of the brain responsible for controlling food intake and energy regulation.
In animal models, offspring exposed to overnutrition during key periods of development eat more when they grow up, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms that lead to these changes in eating behaviour.
In a study published today in PLOS Biology, researchers from the Institute of Metabolic Science and the MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit at the 探花直播 of Cambridge found that mice born from obese mothers had higher levels of the microRNA miR-505-5p in their hypothalamus鈥攆rom as early as the fetal stage into adulthood. 探花直播offspring of obese mothers chose to eat more specifically of foods that were high in fat, which is consistent with fat sensing being disrupted in the hypothalamus. 听
Dr Laura Dearden from the Institute of Metabolic Science, the study鈥檚 first author, said: 鈥淥ur results show that obesity during pregnancy causes changes to the baby's brain that makes them eat more high fat food in adulthood and more likely to develop obesity.鈥
Senior author Professor Susan Ozanne from the MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit and Institute of Metabolic Science said: 鈥淚mportantly, we showed that moderate exercise, without weight loss, during pregnancies complicated by obesity prevented the changes to the baby's brain.鈥
Cell culture experiments showed that miR-505-5p levels can be influenced by exposing hypothalamic neurons to long-chain fatty acids and insulin, which are both high in pregnancies complicated by obesity. 探花直播researchers identified miR-505-5p as a regulator of pathways involved in fatty acid uptake and metabolism 鈥 high levels of the miRNA make the offspring brain unable to sense when they are eating high fat foods. Several of the genes that miR-505-5p regulates are associated with high body mass index in human genetic studies, showing these same changes in humans can cause obesity.
探花直播study is one of the first to demonstrate the molecular mechanisms linking nutritional exposure in utero to eating behaviour.听
Dr Dearden added: 鈥淲hile our work was only carried out in mice, it may help us understand why the children of mothers living with obesity are more likely to become obese themselves, with early life exposures, genetics and current environment all being contributing factors.鈥
Reference
Dearden, L et al. PLOS Biology; 4 Jun 2024; DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002641
Adapted from a press release by PLOS Biology
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