Mom's high fat diet during pregnancy may be key to
child's weight issues
Reported June 11, 2008
HOUSTON -- (June 11, 2008) -- The notion
that you are what you eat may go back even farther – to your mother, said a
Baylor College of Medicine researcher in a report that appears in the current
issue of the Journal of Molecular Endocrinology.
"We want to understand the mechanisms behind the current epidemic of childhood
obesity," said Dr. Kjersti M. Aagaard-Tillery, assistant professor of obstetrics
and gynecology at BCM. "What efforts can we take in pregnancy to affect this
problem? Is it that the mom is obese or is exposure to a high fat diet the
problem?"
A consortium of researchers from BCM, the University of Utah Health Sciences in
Salt Lake and the Oregon National Primate Research Center teamed up to study
what happens to the offspring of non-human primate mothers fed a diet consisting
of 35 percent fat. When compared to those who ate a 13 percent fat diet, the
offspring of these animals had non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (comparable to
that found in obese human youngsters). In fact, their triglycerides (one form of
fat measured in blood) were three times higher than those of the normal
offspring.
In some cases, the mothers on the high fat diet did not become obese themselves
but their offspring suffered the same ill effects as those of moms who did
become obese.
At a molecular level, Aagaard and her collaborators found modifications in the
DNA backbone – the histones – of the offspring of the mothers who ate a high fat
diet. This is called an epigenetic change, which means that while it does not
affect the DNA code per se, it still affects the way that the genes are
regulated and the degree to which they are expressed (the so-called "histone
code").
"We found that there were genes that were differentially regulated in the livers
of the offspring whose mothers had a high fat diet, and that these changes were
associated with histone alterations," she said. "The genes affected were not
always those associated with obesity."
She is now trying to find out why these gene changes exist and how they might
affect the animals later in life. She is interested in looking at whether they
are the direct result of permanent modifications in the histones in both the
liver and brain, and whether they further relate to specific changes in the
chemical modifications (or methylation) of the regulatory regions of genes.
Others who took part in this work include Kevin Grove and Jacalyn Bishop of the
Oregon Health Science University, Oregon National Primate Research Center and
Xingrao Ke, Qi Fu, Robert McKnight, and Robert H. Lane of the University of Utah
Health Sciences in Salt Lake.
Funding for this work came from the 2007 National Institutes of Health
Director's New Innovators Award to Aagaard, the National Institute of Digestive
and Diabetes and Kidney Diseases and the National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development.
Source : http://jme.endocrinology-journals.org/cgi/reprint/JME-08-0025v1. |