Small intestinal Paneth cells, enteric glial cells (EGC), and goblet cells maintain gut mucosal integrity, homeostasis, and influence host physiology locally and through the gut-brain axis. Little is known about their roles during pregnancy, or how maternal malnutrition impacts these cells and their development. Pregnant mice were fed a control diet (CON), undernourished by 30% vs. control (UN), or fed a high fat diet (HF). At day 18.5 (term = 19), gut integrity and function were assessed by immunohistochemistry and qPCR. UN mothers displayed reduced mRNA expression of Paneth cell antimicrobial peptides (AMP; ) and an accumulation of villi goblet cells, while HF had reduced and mucin () mRNA and increased lysozyme protein. UN fetuses had increased mRNA expression of gut transcription factor , associated with reduced expression of maturation markers (, ), and increased expression of tight junctions (TJ; ). HF fetuses had increased mRNA expression of EGC markers (, , ), AMP (, , ), and TJ (, ), and reduced expression of an AMP-activator (). Maternal malnutrition altered expression of genes that maintain maternal gut homeostasis, and altered fetal gut permeability, function, and development. This may have long-term implications for host-microbe interactions, immunity, and offspring gut-brain axis function.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6628366PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11061375DOI Listing

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