[HTML][HTML] High-fat diet consumption during pregnancy and the early post-natal period leads to decreased α cell plasticity in the nonhuman primate

SM Comstock, LD Pound, JM Bishop, DL Takahashi… - Molecular …, 2013 - Elsevier
SM Comstock, LD Pound, JM Bishop, DL Takahashi, AM Kostrba, MS Smith, KL Grove
Molecular metabolism, 2013Elsevier
We investigated the impact of poor maternal nutrition and metabolic health on the
development of islets of the nonhuman primate (NHP). Interestingly, fetal offspring of high fat
diet (HFD) fed animals had normal total islet and β cell mass; however, there was a
significant reduction in α cell mass, and decreased expression of transcription factors
involved in α cell differentiation. In juvenile animals all offspring maintained on a HFD during
the postweaning period demonstrated increases in total islet mass, however, the control …
Abstract
We investigated the impact of poor maternal nutrition and metabolic health on the development of islets of the nonhuman primate (NHP). Interestingly, fetal offspring of high fat diet (HFD) fed animals had normal total islet and β cell mass; however, there was a significant reduction in α cell mass, and decreased expression of transcription factors involved in α cell differentiation. In juvenile animals all offspring maintained on a HFD during the postweaning period demonstrated increases in total islet mass, however, the control offspring displaying increased islet number, and HFD offspring displayed increased islet size. Finally, while control offspring had increases in α and β cells, the HFD offspring had increases only in β cell number. These studies indicate that consumption of a HFD diet during pregnancy in the NHP, independent of maternal metabolic health, causes long-term abnormalities in α cell plasticity that may contribute to chronic disease susceptibility.
Elsevier