High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases

Adult exposure to high fat diet (HFD) has been linked to increased risk of musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases; however, the contribution of gestational HFD to elevated oxidative stress (OS), perinatal cardiovascular, skeletal, and metabolic dysfunction as well as long-term effec...

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Main Author: Liang, Chengya
Other Authors: Veterinary Medical Sciences
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26700
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04082009-160602/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-267002020-09-26T05:34:08Z High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases Liang, Chengya Veterinary Medical Sciences Prater, Mary Renee Li, Yunbo Ehrich, Marion F. Holladay, Steven D. Gestational Diabetes Placental Vasculopathy Fetal Malformation Developmental Origins of Health and Disease High Saturated Fat Diet Adult exposure to high fat diet (HFD) has been linked to increased risk of musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases; however, the contribution of gestational HFD to elevated oxidative stress (OS), perinatal cardiovascular, skeletal, and metabolic dysfunction as well as long-term effects on adult offspring are incompletely understood. Pathophysiologic mechanisms linking gestational HFD, OS, and insulin resistance to perinatal development and adult-onset chronic diseases are explored in the present study, and maternal antioxidant (quercetin) is offered as a potential preventive dietary supplement to reduce fetal and maternal sequelae of HFD. Female C57BL/6 mice were fed â cafeteria-styleâ HFD (including 32.1% saturated fat to mimic a typical fast food menu) with or without quercetin for one month prior to conception, and throughout gestation. HFD dams developed gestational diabetes with significantly increased placental OS and vasculopathy. Neonates were smaller at birth than age-matched controls, and surviving offspring developed type 2 diabetes, hypertension and osteoporosis during adulthood, despite having been fed healthy diet throughout their postnatal life. Additional measures of bone using three-dimensionally reconstructed computed tomographic image analysis (microCT) revealed microarchitectural changes of bone at birth, and at 6 and 12 months postnatally. Fetuses from HFD dams displayed diminished bone mineral density (BMD) and disrupted endochondral and intramembranous ossification with significantly shortened distal limb lengths, as compared to offspring of standard rodent chow dams. Skeletal malformation persisted into adulthood despite the fact that both control and HFD offspring were fed conventional rodent chow throughout postnatal life. The offspring gestationally exposed to HFD showed significant decreased femoral BMD at 6 months of age and dysregulation of distal femoral trabecular architecture at 12 months of age, indicating development of osteoporosis. We were able to reduce incidence of placental vasculopathy, fetal maldevelopment and adult-onset type 2 diabetes, hypertension and osteoporosis with concurrent maternal quercetin supplementation during pregnancy. Collectively, these data suggested that maternal HFD increases placental OS and vascular damage during pregnancy, which are associated with fetal malformation and elevated adult-onset multisystemic chronic diseases. Maternal quercetin supplementation must be further explored as a potential dietary intervention for improved placental integrity, fetal development and lifelong health. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:09:07Z 2014-03-14T20:09:07Z 2009-04-03 2009-04-08 2012-10-01 2009-04-22 Dissertation etd-04082009-160602 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26700 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04082009-160602/ CHENGYALIANGDissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Gestational Diabetes
Placental Vasculopathy
Fetal Malformation
Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
High Saturated Fat Diet
spellingShingle Gestational Diabetes
Placental Vasculopathy
Fetal Malformation
Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
High Saturated Fat Diet
Liang, Chengya
High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
description Adult exposure to high fat diet (HFD) has been linked to increased risk of musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases; however, the contribution of gestational HFD to elevated oxidative stress (OS), perinatal cardiovascular, skeletal, and metabolic dysfunction as well as long-term effects on adult offspring are incompletely understood. Pathophysiologic mechanisms linking gestational HFD, OS, and insulin resistance to perinatal development and adult-onset chronic diseases are explored in the present study, and maternal antioxidant (quercetin) is offered as a potential preventive dietary supplement to reduce fetal and maternal sequelae of HFD. Female C57BL/6 mice were fed â cafeteria-styleâ HFD (including 32.1% saturated fat to mimic a typical fast food menu) with or without quercetin for one month prior to conception, and throughout gestation. HFD dams developed gestational diabetes with significantly increased placental OS and vasculopathy. Neonates were smaller at birth than age-matched controls, and surviving offspring developed type 2 diabetes, hypertension and osteoporosis during adulthood, despite having been fed healthy diet throughout their postnatal life. Additional measures of bone using three-dimensionally reconstructed computed tomographic image analysis (microCT) revealed microarchitectural changes of bone at birth, and at 6 and 12 months postnatally. Fetuses from HFD dams displayed diminished bone mineral density (BMD) and disrupted endochondral and intramembranous ossification with significantly shortened distal limb lengths, as compared to offspring of standard rodent chow dams. Skeletal malformation persisted into adulthood despite the fact that both control and HFD offspring were fed conventional rodent chow throughout postnatal life. The offspring gestationally exposed to HFD showed significant decreased femoral BMD at 6 months of age and dysregulation of distal femoral trabecular architecture at 12 months of age, indicating development of osteoporosis. We were able to reduce incidence of placental vasculopathy, fetal maldevelopment and adult-onset type 2 diabetes, hypertension and osteoporosis with concurrent maternal quercetin supplementation during pregnancy. Collectively, these data suggested that maternal HFD increases placental OS and vascular damage during pregnancy, which are associated with fetal malformation and elevated adult-onset multisystemic chronic diseases. Maternal quercetin supplementation must be further explored as a potential dietary intervention for improved placental integrity, fetal development and lifelong health. === Ph. D.
author2 Veterinary Medical Sciences
author_facet Veterinary Medical Sciences
Liang, Chengya
author Liang, Chengya
author_sort Liang, Chengya
title High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
title_short High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
title_full High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
title_fullStr High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
title_full_unstemmed High Saturated Fat Diet Induces Gestational Diabetes, Perinatal Skeletal Malformation and Adult-Onset Chronic Diseases
title_sort high saturated fat diet induces gestational diabetes, perinatal skeletal malformation and adult-onset chronic diseases
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26700
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04082009-160602/
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