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Maternal high-fat diet programs offspring airway hyperinnervation and hyperresponsiveness
Kayla R. Williams, Hoyt A.T.K. Bright, Allison D. Fryer, David B. Jacoby, Zhenying Nie
Kayla R. Williams, Hoyt A.T.K. Bright, Allison D. Fryer, David B. Jacoby, Zhenying Nie
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Research Article Metabolism Pulmonology

Maternal high-fat diet programs offspring airway hyperinnervation and hyperresponsiveness

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Abstract

The impact of diet-induced maternal obesity on offspring airway hyperresponsiveness was studied in a diversity outbred mouse model that mirrors human genetic diversity. Female mice were started on high-fat or regular diet 8 weeks before breeding and throughout pregnancy and lactation. After weaning, all offspring were fed a regular diet. By 12 weeks, body weight and fat were increased in offspring of high-fat diet–fed dams, which was accompanied by metabolic dysfunction and hyperinsulinemia. This was followed by increased epithelial sensory innervation and increased bronchoconstriction to inhaled 5-hydroxytryptamine at 16 weeks. Bronchoconstriction was nerve mediated and blocked by vagotomy or atropine. A high-fat diet before pregnancy exerted the most influence on offspring airway physiology. Maternal obesity induced metabolic dysfunction and hyperinsulinemia, resulting in hyperinnervation and subsequent increased reflex-mediated hyperresponsiveness in their offspring. This is relevant to our understanding of asthma inheritance, considering the genetic diversity of humans.

Authors

Kayla R. Williams, Hoyt A.T.K. Bright, Allison D. Fryer, David B. Jacoby, Zhenying Nie

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Figure 3

Offspring born to dams on an HFD develop obesity.

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Offspring born to dams on an HFD develop obesity.
Offspring of dams on a...
Offspring of dams on an HFD (filled triangles) had significantly increased percentage body fat (A–D) and decreased percentage lean mass (E–H) at all time points measured (ages 4–16 weeks) compared with offspring of dams on an RD (unfilled triangles). There was no significant difference in body weight (I and J) until 12 weeks, after which offspring of dams on an HFD increased their weight, and this persisted through 16 weeks (K and L). Each triangle represents 1 animal; n = 10–28 for offspring of dams on an RD, and n = 11–39 for offspring of dams on an HFD. Data were analyzed by Student’s t test and presented as means ± SEM. *P < 0.05.

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