Maternal High-Fat Diet Programs Babies In The Womb To Be Fat
Reported September 19, 2011
New research in mice indicates that babies born to moms who eat a high-fat
diet before and during
pregnancy have a higher fat mass and smaller livers than babies whose moms
consume low-fat fare,
according to scientists at Oregon Health & Science University Doernbecher
Children's Hospital.
The good news, the researchers report, is that moms who switch to a low-fat
diet during pregnancy
considerably reduce the risk of these negative effects. Their findings are
published online in the
American Journal of Physiology and Endocrinology Metabolism, a publication
of the American Physiological
Society.
Previous research has shown babies who receive too much or too little
nutrition in the womb experience
profound and permanent changes in their development - including alterations
in the structure of the
liver, brain and pancreas - that increase their susceptibility to developing
various diseases later in
life, including obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
And given that nearly half of women of childbearing age are overweight or
obese in the United States,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there is a
pressing need to inform women and
their health care providers of the inherent dangers maternal overeating
poses to their child's future
health and risk of chronic disease.
"One of the key findings here is that the offspring are born with a marked
shift in body composition,
away from lean mass and toward fat mass, prior to any dietary exposure in
the offspring themselves," said
principal investigator Stephanie M. Krasnow, Ph.D., a scientist in the Papé
Family Pediatric Research
Institute at OHSU Doernbecher Children's Hospital.
Krasnow and colleagues in the Daniel Marks Lab used a mouse model to examine
how consumption of a high-
fat diet during pregnancy effects body composition in the newborn. Female
mice were fed either a low-fat
or high-fat diet for six months and were mated with male mice after 4, 12
and 23 weeks. The females who
ate a high-fat diet gained more body weight and had a higher fat mass than
the females who ate a low-fat
diet. And on the day of birth, babies born to females who had consumed a
high-fat food had more body fat,
less lean mass, and smaller livers than the newborns of females that
consumed low-fat food.
These changes in body composition and organ size occurred before the female
mice eating a high-fat diet
became obese, the researchers report. And even when the females were not
obese, eating a high-fat diet
prior to and during pregnancy "programmed" their unborn babies to have
increased body fat and smaller
livers at birth. Fortunately, the researchers found, switching to a low-fat
diet just during pregnancy
prevented the infants from accumulating excess fat mass in utero and also
prevented their having smaller
livers.
"These findings demonstrate that changing to a low-fat diet during pregnancy
minimizes the harmful
effects of maternal obesity on the newborn's body composition, potentially
reducing the child's risk of
developing obesity and related diseases later in life," said Krasnow.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Burroughs
Wellcome Fund