AI Article Synopsis

  • Maternal selenium deficiency during pregnancy can negatively affect fetal development, leading to potential thyroid issues and impaired kidney function in offspring.
  • In a study with mice, while antioxidant activity was unaffected, female offspring showed increased kidney glycation, and male offspring had reduced kidney protein levels and lower urine output.
  • The findings suggest that thyroid dysfunction, possibly linked to maternal selenium levels, may contribute to long-term kidney problems, highlighting the importance of adequate selenium intake during pregnancy to prevent future health issues.

Article Abstract

Selenium deficiency during pregnancy can impair fetal development and predispose offspring to thyroid dysfunction. Given that key selenoproteins are highly expressed in the kidney and that poor thyroid health can lead to kidney disease, it is likely that kidney function may be impaired in offspring of selenium-deficient mothers. This study utilized a mouse model of maternal selenium deficiency to investigate kidney protein glycation, mitochondrial adaptations, and urinary excretion in offspring. Female C57BL/6 mice were fed control (>190 µg selenium/kg) or low selenium (<50 µg selenium/kg) diets four weeks prior to mating, throughout gestation, and lactation. At postnatal day (PN) 170, offspring were placed in metabolic cages for 24 hr prior to tissue collection at PN180. Maternal selenium deficiency did not impact selenoprotein antioxidant activity, but increased advanced glycation end products in female kidneys. Male offspring had reduced renal Complex II and Complex IV protein levels and lower 24 hr urine flow. Although renal aquaporin 2 (Aqp2) and arginine vasopressin receptor 2 (Avpr2) mRNA were not altered by maternal selenium deficiency, a correlation between urine flow and plasma free T concentrations in male but not female offspring suggests that programed thyroid dysfunction may be mediating impaired urine flow. This study demonstrates that maternal selenium deficiency can lead to long-term deficits in kidney parameters that may be secondary to impaired thyroid dysfunction. Considering the significant burden of renal dysfunction as a comorbidity to metabolic diseases, improving maternal selenium intake in pregnancy may be one simple measure to prevent lifelong disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7995548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14785DOI Listing

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