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Programming of weight and obesity across the lifecourse by the maternal metabolic exposome: A systematic review

Journal

MOLECULAR ASPECTS OF MEDICINE
Volume 87, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mam.2021.100986

Keywords

Exposome; Development; Lifecourse health; Obesity; Programming; Pregnancy; Systematic review

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [FS154313]
  2. Women and Children's Health Research Institute through Stollery Children's Hospital Foundation
  3. Alberta Women's Health Foundation
  4. Canada Research Chair in Maternal and Perinatal Cardiovascular Health
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. Molly Towell Perinatal Research Foundation
  7. Carleton University Office of Research
  8. Carleton University
  9. University of Alberta

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Exposome research aims to understand the various environmental exposures that impact human health, particularly the mechanism behind obesity. Maternal metabolic exposome and early environmental exposures increase the risk of offspring obesity through mechanisms such as epigenetic modifications, altered placental function, changes in gut microbiome and breast milk composition, and metabolic inflammation affecting development of the central appetite system, adipose tissues, and liver.
Exposome research aims to comprehensively understand the multiple environmental exposures that influence human health. To date, much of exposome science has focused on environmental chemical exposures and does not take a lifecourse approach. The rising prevalence of obesity, and the limited success in its prevention points to the need for a better understanding of the diverse exposures that associate with, or protect against, this condition, and the mechanisms driving its pathogenesis. The objectives of this review were to 1. evaluate the evidence on the maternal metabolic exposome in the programming of offspring growth/obesity and 2. identify and discuss the mechanisms underlying the programming of obesity. A systematic review was conducted following PRISMA guidelines to capture articles that investigated early life metabolic exposures and offspring weight and/or obesity outcomes. Scientific databases were searched using pre-determined indexed search terms, and risk of bias assessments were conducted to determine study quality. A final total of 76 articles were obtained and extracted data from human and animal studies were visualised using GOfER diagrams. Multiple early life exposures, including maternal obesity, diabetes and adverse nutrition, increase the risk of high weight at birth and postnatally, and excess adipose accumulation in human and animal offspring. The main mechanisms through which the metabolic exposome programmes offspring growth and obesity risk include epigenetic modifications, altered placental function, altered composition of the gut microbiome and breast milk, and metabolic inflammation, with downstream effects on development of the central appetite system, adipose tissues and liver. Understanding early life risks and protectors, and the mechanisms through which the exposome modifies health trajectories, is critical for developing and applying early interventions to prevent offspring obesity later in life.

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