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Maternal diets trigger sex-specific divergent trajectories of gene expression and epigenetic systems in mouse placenta. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - High-fat diets during pregnancy lead to sex-specific epigenetic changes in offspring that could contribute to adult diseases, with the placenta playing a crucial role in these processes.
  • - Investigations in mice revealed that both the expression of genes and their responses to a high-fat diet showed marked differences between males and females, with specific genes linked to sex chromosomes demonstrating unique alterations.
  • - The study emphasizes the need to reconsider current dietary intervention strategies due to the significant differences in how male and female placentas react to maternal overnutrition, affecting gene regulation and potential health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Males and females responses to gestational overnutrition set the stage for subsequent sex-specific differences in adult onset non communicable diseases. Placenta, as a widely recognized programming agent, contibutes to the underlying processes. According to our previous findings, a high-fat diet during gestation triggers sex-specific epigenetic alterations within CpG and throughout the genome, together with the deregulation of clusters of imprinted genes. We further investigated the impact of diet and sex on placental histology, transcriptomic and epigenetic signatures in mice. Both basal gene expression and response to maternal high-fat diet were sexually dimorphic in whole placentas. Numerous genes showed sexually dimorphic expression, but only 11 genes regardless of the diet. In line with the key role of genes belonging to the sex chromosomes, 3 of these genes were Y-specific and 3 were X-specific. Amongst all the genes that were differentially expressed under a high-fat diet, only 16 genes were consistently affected in both males and females. The differences were not only quantitative but remarkably qualitative. The biological functions and networks of genes dysregulated differed markedly between the sexes. Seven genes of the epigenetic machinery were dysregulated, due to effects of diet, sex or both, including the Y- and X-linked histone demethylase paralogues Kdm5c and Kdm5d, which could mark differently male and female epigenomes. The DNA methyltransferase cofactor Dnmt3l gene expression was affected, reminiscent of our previous observation of changes in global DNA methylation. Overall, this striking sexual dimorphism of programming trajectories impose a considerable revision of the current dietary interventions protocols.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3489896PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0047986PLOS

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