4.7 Article

Gestational heat stress alters skeletal muscle gene expression profiles and vascularity in fetal pigs in a sexually dimorphic manner

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40104-022-00730-2

Keywords

Adipogenesis; Angiogenesis; Fetal pig; Gestation; Heat stress; Sexual dimorphism; Skeletal muscle; Sows

Funding

  1. Australian Pork Limited (APL) [2017/2216]
  2. APL
  3. University of Melbourne

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study found that heat stress during early to mid-gestation in sows altered gene expression profiles in fetal skeletal muscles, with more significant changes observed in female fetuses. The changes included repression in transcription and angiogenesis, as well as enhanced adipogenesis. However, the reduction in muscle vascularity was observed regardless of sex.
Background There is evidence that sow heat stress (HS) during gestation affects fetal development with implications for impaired muscle growth. We have previously demonstrated that maternal HS during early to mid-gestation compromised muscle fibre hyperplasia in developing fetal pigs. Thus, we hypothesised these phenotypic changes are associated with a change in expression of genes regulating fetal skeletal muscle development and metabolism. To test this, at d 60 of gestation, RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry were performed on fetal longissimus dorsi (LD) muscle biopsies collected from pregnant gilts that had experienced either thermoneutral control (CON, 20 degrees C, n = 7 gilts, 18 LD samples) or controlled HS (cyclic 28 to 33 degrees C, n = 8 gilts, 23 LD samples) conditions for 3 weeks. Results A total of 282 genes were differentially expressed between the HS and CON groups in female LD muscles (false discovery rate (FDR) <= 0.05), whereas no differentially expressed genes were detected in male LD muscles between the two groups (FDR > 0.05). Gestational HS increased the expression of genes associated with transcription corepressor activity, adipogenesis cascades, negative regulation of angiogenesis and pro-inflammatory signalling in female LD muscles. Immunohistochemical analyses revealed a decreased muscle vascularity density in fetuses from HS group for both sexes compared to those from the CON group (P = 0.004). Conclusions These results reveal gilt HS during early to mid-gestation altered gene expression profiles in fetal LD muscles in a sexually dimorphic manner. The molecular responses, including transcription and angiogenesis repressions and enhanced adipogenesis cascades, were exclusively observed in females. However, the associated reductions in muscle vascularity were observed independently of sexes. Collectively this may indicate female fetal pigs are more adaptive to gestational HS in terms of gene expression changes, and/or there may be sexually dimorphic differences with respect to the timing of muscle molecular responses to gestational HS.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available