Obesity alters the ovarian glucidic homeostasis disrupting the reproductive outcome of female rats.

J Nutr Biochem

Laboratorio de Biología del Desarrollo, Instituto de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Neurociencias (IFIBYNE-CONICET-UBA), Pabellón 2, Cdad. Universitaria, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Electronic address:

Published: April 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity is increasingly linked to reproductive issues such as infertility and ovulation problems, though the exact mechanisms are not fully understood.
  • The study used a cafeteria diet model to induce obesity in female rats, which led to obesity, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance, negatively affecting their ovaries.
  • Findings indicate that obesity disrupts glucose and insulin regulation in the ovaries, causing reproductive issues and resulting in overlarge offspring, suggesting long-term health impacts for both mothers and their young.

Article Abstract

Obesity constitutes a health problem of increasing worldwide prevalence related to many reproductive problems such as infertility, ovulation dysfunction, preterm delivery, fetal growth disorders, etc. The mechanisms linking obesity to these pathologies are not fully understood. Cafeteria diet (CAF) is the animal model used for the study of obesity that more closely reflects western diet habits. Previously we described that CAF induces obesity associated to hyperglycemia, reduced ovarian reserve, presence of follicular cysts and ovulatory impairments. The aim of the present study was to contribute in the understanding of the physiological mechanisms altered as consequence of obesity. For that purpose, female Wistar rats were fed ad libitum with a standard diet (control group) or CAF (Obese group). We found that CAF fed-rats developed obesity, glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. Ovaries from obese rats showed decreased glucose uptake and became insulin resistant, showing decreased ovarian expression of glucotransporter type 4 and insulin receptor gene expression respect to controls. These animals showed an increased follicular nitric oxyde synthase expression that may be responsible for the ovulatory disruptions and for inflammation, a common feature in obesity. Obese rats resulted subfertile and their pups were macrosomic. We conclude that obesity alters the systemic and the ovarian glucidic homeostasis impairing the reproductive outcome. Since macrosomia is a risk factor for metabolic and obstetric disorders in adult life, we suggest that obesity is impacting not only on health and reproduction but it is also impacting on health and reproduction of the offspring.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jnutbio.2017.01.003DOI Listing

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