Prenatal ambient air pollution exposure, infant growth and placental mitochondrial DNA content in the INMA birth cohort.

Environ Res

ISGlobal, Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology (CREAL), Barcelona, Spain; Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; CIBER de Epidemiologia y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Institute of Health Carlos III, Madrid, Spain.

Published: August 2017

Background: The association between prenatal air pollution exposure and postnatal growth has hardly been explored. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), as a marker of oxidative stress, and growth at birth can play an intermediate role in this association.

Objective: In a subset of the Spanish birth cohort INMA we assessed first whether prenatal nitrogen dioxide (NO) exposure is associated with infant growth. Secondly, we evaluated whether growth at birth (length and weight) could play a mediating role in this association. Finally, the mediation role of placental mitochondrial DNA content in this association was assessed.

Methods: In 336 INMA children, relative placental mtDNA content was measured. Land-use regression models were used to estimate prenatal NO exposure. Infant growth (height and weight) was assessed at birth, at 6 months of age, and at 1 year of age. We used multiple linear regression models and performed mediation analyses. The proportion of mediation was calculated as the ratio of indirect effect to total effect.

Results: Prenatal NO exposure was inversely associated with all infant growth parameters. A 10µg/m³ increment in prenatal NO exposure during trimester 1 of pregnancy was significantly inversely associated with height at 6 months of age (-6.6%; 95%CI: -11.4, -1.9) and weight at 1 year of age (-4.2%; 95%CI: -8.3, -0.1). These associations were mediated by birth length (31.7%; 95%CI: 34.5, 14.3) and weight (53.7%; 95%CI: 65.3, -0.3), respectively. Furthermore, 5.5% (95%CI: 10.0, -0.2) of the association between trimester 1 NO exposure and length at 6 months of age could be mediated by placental mtDNA content.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that impaired fetal growth caused by prenatal air pollution exposure can lead to impaired infant growth during the first year of life. Furthermore, molecular adaptations in placental mtDNA are associated with postnatal consequences of air pollution induced alterations in growth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2017.05.018DOI Listing

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