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      Intergenerational Transmission of Glucose Intolerance and Obesity by In Utero Undernutrition in Mice

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          Abstract

          OBJECTIVE—Low birth weight (LBW) is associated with increased risk of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease during adult life. Moreover, this programmed disease risk can progress to subsequent generations. We previously described a mouse model of LBW, produced by maternal caloric undernutrition (UN) during late gestation. LBW offspring (F 1-UN generation) develop progressive obesity and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) with aging. We aimed to determine whether such metabolic phenotypes can be transmitted to subsequent generations in an experimental model, even in the absence of altered nutrition during the second pregnancy.

          RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We intercrossed female and male F 1 adult control (C) and UN mice and characterized metabolic phenotypes in F 2 offspring.

          RESULTS—We demonstrate that 1) reduced birth weight progresses to F 2 offspring through the paternal line (C♀-C♂ = 1.64 g; C♀-UN♂ = 1.57 g, P < 0.05; UN♀-C♂ = 1.64 g; UN♀-UN♂ = 1.60 g, P < 0.05), 2) obesity progresses through the maternal line (percent body fat: C♀-C♂ = 22.4%; C♀-UN♂ = 22.9%; UN♀-C♂ = 25.9%, P < 0.05; UN♀-UN♂ = 27.5%, P < 0.05), and 3) IGT progresses through both parental lineages (glucose tolerance test area under curve C♀-C♂ = 100; C♀-UN♂ = 122, P < 0.05; UN♀-C♂ = 131, P < 0.05; UN♀-UN♂ = 151, P < 0.05). Mechanistically, IGT in both F 1 and F 2 generations is linked to impaired β-cell function, explained, in part, by dysregulation of Sur1 expression.

          CONCLUSIONS—Maternal undernutrition during pregnancy (F 0) programs reduced birth weight, IGT, and obesity in both first- and second-generation offspring. Sex-specific transmission of phenotypes implicates complex mechanisms including alterations in the maternal metabolic environment (transmaternal inheritance of obesity), gene expression mediated by developmental and epigenetic pathways (transpaternal inheritance of LBW), or both (IGT).

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          Most cited references38

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          Diabetes

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            In utero programming of chronic disease.

            1. Many human fetuses have to adapt to a limited supply of nutrients. In doing so they permanently change their structure and metabolism. 2. These 'programmed' changes may be the origins of a number of diseases in later life, including coronary heart disease and the related disorders stroke, diabetes and hypertension. 3. This review examines the evidence linking these diseases to fetal undernutrition and provides an overview of previous studies in this area.
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              Epigenetic inheritance at the agouti locus in the mouse.

              Epigenetic modifications have effects on phenotype, but they are generally considered to be cleared on passage through the germ line in mammals, so that only genetic traits are inherited. Here we describe the inheritance of an epigenetic modification at the agouti locus in mice. In viable yellow ( A(vy)/a) mice, transcription originating in an intra-cisternal A particle (IAP) retrotransposon inserted upstream of the agouti gene (A) causes ectopic expression of agouti protein, resulting in yellow fur, obesity, diabetes and increased susceptibility to tumours. The pleiotropic effects of ectopic agouti expression are presumably due to effects of the paracrine signal on other tissues. Avy mice display variable expressivity because they are epigenetic mosaics for activity of the retrotransposon: isogenic Avy mice have coats that vary in a continuous spectrum from full yellow, through variegated yellow/agouti, to full agouti (pseudoagouti). The distribution of phenotypes among offspring is related to the phenotype of the dam; when an A(vy) dam has the agouti phenotype, her offspring are more likely to be agouti. We demonstrate here that this maternal epigenetic effect is not the result of a maternally contributed environment. Rather, our data show that it results from incomplete erasure of an epigenetic modification when a silenced Avy allele is passed through the female germ line, with consequent inheritance of the epigenetic modification. Because retrotransposons are abundant in mammalian genomes, this type of inheritance may be common.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Diabetes
                diabetes
                Diabetes
                American Diabetes Association
                0012-1797
                1939-327X
                February 2009
                : 58
                : 2
                : 460-468
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Research Division, Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
                [2 ]Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K
                [3 ]Hospital Sant Joan de Deu, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
                [4 ]Division of Endocrinology, Children's Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
                Author notes

                Corresponding author: Mary-Elizabeth Patti, mary.elizabeth.patti@ 123456joslin.harvard.edu

                Article
                582460
                10.2337/db08-0490
                2628621
                19017762
                02007fd8-a80a-4143-97cf-76ec7221e39c
                Copyright © 2009, American Diabetes Association

                Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.

                History
                : 30 April 2008
                : 12 November 2008
                Categories
                Pathophysiology

                Endocrinology & Diabetes
                Endocrinology & Diabetes

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