4.7 Article

Maternal obesity alters fatty acid oxidation, AMPK activity, and associated DNA methylation in mesenchymal stem cells from human infants

Journal

MOLECULAR METABOLISM
Volume 6, Issue 11, Pages 1503-1516

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2017.08.012

Keywords

Maternal/fetal; Obesity; AMPK; Lipid metabolism; Mesenchymal stem cells

Funding

  1. Obesity Society
  2. University of Colorado Center for Women's Health Research
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  4. Genomics and Microarray Shared Resource of Colorado's NIH/NCI Cancer Center [P30CA046934]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [K12HD057022, K01DK106347]
  6. American Heart Association [14PRE18230008]
  7. Colorado Nutrition and Obesity Research Center (NORC
  8. NIH) [P30DK048520]
  9. NIH [R01DK076648]
  10. NIH/NCATS Colorado CTSA [UL1TR001082]

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Objective: Infants born to mothers with obesity have greater adiposity, ectopic fat storage, and are at increased risk for childhood obesity and metabolic disease compared with infants of normal weight mothers, though the cellular mechanisms mediating these effects are unclear. Methods: We tested the hypothesis that human, umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from infants born to obese (Ob-MSC) versus normal weight (NW-MSC) mothers demonstrate altered fatty acid metabolism consistent with adult obesity. In infant MSCs undergoing myogenesis in vitro, we measured cellular lipid metabolism and AMPK activity, AMPK activation in response to cellular nutrient stress, and MSC DNA methylation and mRNA content of genes related to oxidative metabolism. Results: We found that Ob-MSCs exhibit greater lipid accumulation, lower fatty acid oxidation (FAO), and dysregulation of AMPK activity when undergoing myogenesis in vitro. Further experiments revealed a clear phenotype distinction within the Ob-MSC group where more severe MSC metabolic perturbation corresponded to greater neonatal adiposity and umbilical cord blood insulin levels. Targeted analysis of DNA methylation array revealed Ob-MSC hypermethylation in genes regulating FAO (PRKAG2, ACC2, CPT1A, SDHC) and corresponding lower mRNA content of these genes. Moreover, MSC methylation was positively correlated with infant adiposity. Conclusions: These data suggest that greater infant adiposity is associated with suppressed AMPK activity and reduced lipid oxidation in MSCs from infants born to mothers with obesity and may be an important, early marker of underlying obesity risk. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.

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