Abstract

Maternal overnutrition during pregnancy leads to metabolic and immune alterations, including obesity, hyperphagia, and central and peripheral inflammation in offspring. Exposure to high-energy diets during pregnancy primes ghrelin sensitivity to overfeeding in the offspring at early stages of life. Overfeeding has also been partially related to the early stages of chronic stress. We hypothesized that maternal programming sensitizes ghrelin-induced overfeeding following a chronic stress schedule in the offspring. We used a nutritional programming model exposing female Wistar rats to a cafeteria (CAF) or control diet from prepregnancy to weaning. Male offspring were injected with ghrelin and then subjected to a chronic immobilization stress (CIS) schedule, after which food intake was determined. Hypothalamic and plasma accumulation of cytokines and cortisol were evaluated using BioPlex analysis and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, respectively. We found that rats exposed to the CAF diet exhibited overfeeding after fasting and peripheral ghrelin administration, which was exacerbated in rats exposed to chronic stress. Offspring exposed to the CAF diet accumulated pro-inflammatory interleukin-6 (IL-6), interferon-γ, and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 cytokines in plasma, and IL-6 cytokine in the hypothalamus. Ghrelin-sensitive overfeeding in rats exposed to CAF diet + CIS display increased cortisol levels and decreased IL-6 accumulation in plasma. Together, our results suggest that maternal nutritional programming primes susceptibility to ghrelin response for overfeeding after a CIS schedule that mirrors plasma cortisol accumulation in male offspring.

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