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Males are from Mars, and females are from Venus: sex-specific fetal brain gene expression signatures in a mouse model of maternal diet-induced obesity. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Maternal obesity is linked to negative neurodevelopmental effects in children, such as autism and ADHD, but the exact reasons why are unclear.
  • Previous research indicated abnormal brain development in fetuses of obese women, which led to this study focusing on a mouse model to explore these findings further.
  • In the study, embryos from obese mothers were smaller, with significant differences observed in gene expressions between male and female fetuses, highlighting the impact of maternal diet on brain development.

Article Abstract

Background: Maternal obesity is associated with adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in children, including autism spectrum disorders, developmental delay, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. The underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We previously identified second-trimester amniotic fluid and term cord blood gene expression patterns suggesting dysregulated brain development in fetuses of obese compared with lean women.

Objective: We sought to investigate the biological significance of these findings in a mouse model of maternal diet-induced obesity. We evaluated sex-specific differences in fetal growth, brain gene expression signatures, and associated pathways.

Study Design: Female C57BL/6J mice were fed a 60% high-fat diet or 10% fat control diet for 12-14 weeks prior to mating. During pregnancy, obese dams continued on the high-fat diet or transitioned to the control diet. Lean dams stayed on the control diet. On embryonic day 17.5, embryos were weighed and fetal brains were snap frozen. RNA was extracted from male and female forebrains (10 per diet group per sex) and hybridized to whole-genome expression arrays. Significantly differentially expressed genes were identified using a Welch's t test with the Benjamini-Hochberg correction. Functional analyses were performed using ingenuity pathways analysis and gene set enrichment analysis.

Results: Embryos of dams on the high-fat diet were significantly smaller than controls, with males more severely affected than females (P = .01). Maternal obesity and maternal obesity with dietary change in pregnancy resulted in significantly more dysregulated genes in male vs female fetal brains (386 vs 66, P < .001). Maternal obesity with and without dietary change in pregnancy was associated with unique brain gene expression signatures for each sex, with an overlap of only 1 gene. Changing obese dams to a control diet in pregnancy resulted in more differentially expressed genes in the fetal brain than maternal obesity alone. Functional analyses identified common dysregulated pathways in both sexes, but maternal obesity and maternal dietary change affected different aspects of brain development in males compared with females.

Conclusion: Maternal obesity is associated with sex-specific differences in fetal size and fetal brain gene expression signatures. Male fetal growth and brain gene expression may be more sensitive to environmental influences during pregnancy. Maternal diet during pregnancy has a significant impact on the embryonic brain transcriptome. It is important to consider both fetal sex and maternal diet when evaluating the effects of maternal obesity on fetal neurodevelopment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4851594PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2016.02.054DOI Listing

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