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Paternal hypercholesterolemia elicits sex-specific exacerbation of atherosclerosis in offspring
Rebecca Hernandez, Xiuchun Li, Junchao Shi, Tejasvi R. Dave, Tong Zhou, Qi Chen, Changcheng Zhou
Rebecca Hernandez, Xiuchun Li, Junchao Shi, Tejasvi R. Dave, Tong Zhou, Qi Chen, Changcheng Zhou
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Research Article Cell biology Vascular biology

Paternal hypercholesterolemia elicits sex-specific exacerbation of atherosclerosis in offspring

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Abstract

Emerging studies suggest that various parental exposures affect offspring cardiovascular health, yet the specific mechanisms, particularly the influence of paternal cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors on offspring cardiovascular health, remain elusive. The present study explores how paternal hypercholesterolemia affects offspring atherosclerosis development using the LDL receptor-deficient (LDLR–/–) mouse model. We found that paternal high-cholesterol diet feeding led to significantly increased atherosclerosis in F1 female, but not male, LDLR–/– offspring. Transcriptomic analysis highlighted that paternal hypercholesterolemia stimulated proatherogenic genes, including Ccn1 and Ccn2, in the intima of female offspring. Sperm small noncoding RNAs (sncRNAs), particularly transfer RNA–derived (tRNA-derived) small RNAs (tsRNAs) and rRNA-derived small RNAs (rsRNAs), contribute to the intergenerational transmission of paternally acquired metabolic phenotypes. Using a newly developed PANDORA-Seq method, we identified that high-cholesterol feeding elicited changes in sperm tsRNA/rsRNA profiles that were undetectable by traditional RNA-Seq, and these altered sperm sncRNAs were potentially key factors mediating paternal hypercholesterolemia-elicited atherogenesis in offspring. Interestingly, high-cholesterol feeding altered sncRNA biogenesis–related gene expression in the epididymis but not testis of LDLR–/– sires; this may have led to the modified sperm sncRNA landscape. Our results underscore the sex-specific intergenerational effect of paternal hypercholesterolemia on offspring cardiovascular health and contribute to the understanding of chronic disease etiology originating from parental exposures.

Authors

Rebecca Hernandez, Xiuchun Li, Junchao Shi, Tejasvi R. Dave, Tong Zhou, Qi Chen, Changcheng Zhou

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Figure 6

Paternal hypercholesterolemia alters atherosclerosis-related gene expression in the intima of female F1 offspring.

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Paternal hypercholesterolemia alters atherosclerosis-related gene expres...
Three-week-old male LDLR–/– mice were fed an LCD or HCD diet for 8 weeks before mating with control female LDLR–/– mice. Three-week-old F1 descendants were fed a LCD for 16 weeks. Total RNAs were isolated from the intima of F1 offspring and used for RNA-Seq analysis. (A) Gene set scores of the prioritized GOBP terms of male and female offspring from LCD or HCD-fed sires. The gene set score was calculated using the FAIME algorithm. (B) Heatmap representation of DEGs involved in the indicated GOBP terms. Each column shows 1 individual gene, and each row shows a biological replicate of mouse. Red represents relatively increased gene expression, whereas blue denotes downregulation (n = 4–7 each group).

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