Abstract

. The consumption of food rich in sugar and fat provokes obesity. Prenatal conditions have an impact on taste preferences and metabolism in the adult offspring, and this impact may manifest differently in different sexes. An increase in blood leptin level in pregnant females reduces the risk of obesity and insulin resistance in the offspring, although the mechanisms mediating this effect are unknown. Neither is it known whether maternal leptin affects taste preferences. In this study, we investigated the effect of leptin administration to pregnant mice on the development of diet-induced obesity, food choice, and gene expression in the liver and muscles of the offspring with regard to sex. Leptin was administered to female mice on days 11, 12, and 13 of pregnancy. In male and female offspring, growth rate and intake of standard chow after weaning, obesity development, gene expression in the liver and muscles, and food choice when kept on a high-calorie diet (standard chow, lard, sweet cookies) were recorded. Leptin administration to pregnant females reduced body weight in the female offspring fed on the standard diet. When the offspring were given a high-calorie diet, leptin administration inhibited obesity development and reduced the consumption of cookies only in males. It also increased the consumption of standard chow and the mRNA levels of genes for the insulin receptor and glucose transporter type 4 in the muscles of both male and female offspring. The results demonstrate that an increase in blood leptin levels in pregnant females has a sex-specif ic effect on the metabolism of the offspring increasing resistance to obesity only in male offspring. The mechanism underlying this effect includes a shift in food preference in favor of a balanced diet and maintenance of insulin sensitivity in muscle tissues.

Highlights

  • Nowadays, one of the main causes of the widespread occurrence of obesity and conditions associated therewith is the consumption of high-calorie food (Astrup et al, 2008)

  • The choice of food considerably depends on taste preferences (Duffy et al, 2009), and the preference to palatable fatty and sweet food contributes to the epidemic prevalence of obesity (May, Dus, 2021; Spinelli et al, 2021)

  • The goal of this study was to investigate the effect of leptin administration to pregnant female mice on metabolic indices, taste preferences, and the expression of genes in the liver and muscles of the offspring with regard to sex

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Summary

Introduction

One of the main causes of the widespread occurrence of obesity and conditions associated therewith is the consumption of high-calorie food (Astrup et al, 2008). Taste preferences and tendency to metabolic impairments in an individual are determined by the genotype (Chmurzynska, Mlodzik, 2017; Diószegi et al, 2019) and early development conditions (Mezei et al, 2020). The undernourishment, overnutrition, obesity, and diet of pregnant and nursing dams may exert deferred effects on the taste preferences and metabolic phenotype of the offspring in adulthood and thereby increase or decrease the risk of obesity (Barker, Osmond, 1986; Ong et al, 2012; Gabory et al, 2013; Bale, 2015). Understanding them may add to the elaboration of methods that would correct development in order to reduce the risk of metabolic impairments

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