4.7 Article

Thermoneutral Housing Enables Studies of Vertical Transmission of Obesogenic Diet-Driven Metabolic Diseases

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15234958

Keywords

developmental origin of health and disease (DOHaD); inflammation; intrauterine programming; amniotic fluid; type 2 diabetes; metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD); pregnancy; stillbirth; high-fat diet

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Maternal obesity has negative impacts on offspring health, including decreased neonatal survival, increased risk of obesity, and accelerated susceptibility to metabolic diseases. Severe maternal obesity alters the offspring microbiome and creates a proinflammatory gestational environment, leading to inflammatory changes in utero and adulthood. The findings from this study are consistent with human cohort studies.
Vertical transmission of obesity is a critical contributor to the unabated obesity pandemic and the associated surge in metabolic diseases. Existing experimental models insufficiently recapitulate human-like obesity phenotypes, limiting the discovery of how severe obesity in pregnancy instructs vertical transmission of obesity. Here, via utility of thermoneutral housing and obesogenic diet feeding coupled to syngeneic mating of WT obese female and lean male mice on a C57BL/6 background, we present a tractable, more human-like approach to specifically investigate how maternal obesity contributes to offspring health. Using this model, we found that maternal obesity decreased neonatal survival, increased offspring adiposity, and accelerated offspring predisposition to obesity and metabolic disease. We also show that severe maternal obesity was sufficient to skew offspring microbiome and create a proinflammatory gestational environment that correlated with inflammatory changes in the offspring in utero and adulthood. Analysis of a human birth cohort study of mothers with and without obesity and their infants was consistent with mouse study findings of maternal inflammation and offspring weight gain propensity. Together, our results show that dietary induction of obesity in female mice coupled to thermoneutral housing can be used for future mechanistic interrogations of obesity and metabolic disease in pregnancy and vertical transmission of pathogenic traits.

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