AI Article Synopsis

  • A high sucrose diet during pregnancy can have significant long-term effects on vascular health in offspring, particularly impacting pulmonary artery function.
  • Pregnant rats given a high sucrose solution showed altered vascular structure and increased vasoconstriction in their adult offspring's pulmonary arteries.
  • The study indicates that changes in specific gene expressions related to melatonin receptors may play a more crucial role in vascular issues than previously thought, instead of the expected protein kinase C signaling pathways.

Article Abstract

A high sucrose diet during pregnancy may generate profound effects on vascular diseases in offspring later in life. Pulmonary artery (PA) functions is closely related to pulmonary hypertension, but whether and how prenatal high-sucrose diet (HS) affect pulmonary vasoreactivity in adult offspring remains unknown. We investigated the alterations of PA reactivity in postnatal offspring exposed to prenatal HS. Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats were fed either a tap water or 20 % high sucrose solution throughout pregnancy. Pulmonary arteries from adult offspring were isolated and tested for all experiments. Prenatal HS increased vascular wall thickness, resulted in swollen mitochondria, and altered myofilament distribution in vascular smooth muscle layers of PA. Notably, the offspring's PAs from HS group showed increased vasoconstriction, but reduced PKC function and expression, suggesting that the dysfunction was not primary linked to PKC signals. RNA-Seq analysis of PA revealed that the MT1R and MT2AR genes were significantly increased in the HS group, but their protein levels decreased. This suggests that MT receptors, rather than PKC signaling, are the key factors to influencing vascular contraction of PAs exposure to prenatal HS.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.reprotox.2024.108760DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • A high sucrose diet during pregnancy can have significant long-term effects on vascular health in offspring, particularly impacting pulmonary artery function.
  • Pregnant rats given a high sucrose solution showed altered vascular structure and increased vasoconstriction in their adult offspring's pulmonary arteries.
  • The study indicates that changes in specific gene expressions related to melatonin receptors may play a more crucial role in vascular issues than previously thought, instead of the expected protein kinase C signaling pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the impact of a high-sucrose diet (HS) during pregnancy on the vascular health of offspring, specifically looking at renal interlobar arteries (RIA) in rats.
  • Pregnant rats were either given normal water or a 20% high-sucrose solution, resulting in noticeable vascular damage and increased vasoconstriction responses in the offspring's arteries.
  • The findings suggest that maternal HS affects vascular function through mechanisms involving reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the Akt signaling pathway, linked to reduced expression of the retinoid X receptor gamma (RXRg), which interacts with PPARγ.
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Physiol Behav

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High sugar-sweetened beverage intake has been related to human kidney disease and metabolic alterations. We determine the impact of high sucrose intake from pregnancy until early postnatal days and post-weaning on kidneys from adult male offspring rats. Wistar female rats were mated and assigned into two groups: one control drinking tap water (CM) and another drinking 5 % sucrose diluted in water (SM).

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Purpose: Maternal and postnatal overnutrition has been linked to an increased risk of cardiometabolic diseases in offspring. This study investigated the impact of adult-onset voluntary wheel running to counteract cardiometabolic risks in female offspring exposed to a life-long high-fat, high-sucrose (HFHS) diet.

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