Abstract

BackgroundLimited nutrient availability during development is associated with metabolic diseases in adulthood. The molecular cause for these defects is unclear. Here, we investigate if transcriptional changes caused by developmental malnutrition reveal an early response that can be linked to metabolism and metabolic diseases.ResultsWe limited nutrient availability by removing yolk from zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos. We then measured genome expression after 8, 24, 32 h post-fertilization (hpf) by RNA sequencing and 48 hpf by microarray profiling. We assessed the functional impact of deregulated genes by enrichment analysis of gene ontologies, pathways and CpG sites around the transcription start sites. Nutrient depletion during embryogenesis does not affect viability, but induces a bias towards female development. It induces subtle expression changes of metabolic genes: lipid transport, oxidative signaling, and glycolysis are affected during earlier stages, and hormonal signaling at 48 hpf. Co-citation analysis indicates association of deregulated genes to the metabolic syndrome, a known outcome of early-life nutrient depletion. Notably, deregulated methionine cycle genes indicate altered methyl donor availability. We find that the regulation of deregulated genes may be less dependent on methyl donor availability.ConclusionsThe systemic response to reduced nutrient availability in zebrafish embryos affects metabolic pathways and can be linked to metabolic diseases. Further exploration of the reported zebrafish model system may elucidate the consequences of reduced nutrient availability during embryogenesis.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-1654-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Limited nutrient availability during development is associated with metabolic diseases in adulthood

  • We exclude that differences in gene transcription between yolk depleted (YD) and SP embryos are due to lethality or developmental delay

  • YD treatment in zebrafish embryos dynamically affects the expression of metabolic genes, hormones and genes of the methionine cycle

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Limited nutrient availability during development is associated with metabolic diseases in adulthood. We investigate if transcriptional changes caused by developmental malnutrition reveal an early response that can be linked to metabolism and metabolic diseases. A combination of Developmental plasticity triggered by nutrient depletion during development would cause changes in embryonic gene expression, which may contribute to the phenotypes observed in adulthood. We test this hypothesis experimentally by partially depleting zebrafish embryos from yolk at an early developmental stage. We find that partial yolk-depletion (YD) leads to subtle changes in gene expression that are statistically significant, thereby affecting expression changes of metabolic genes and hormonal signaling. By scoring the number of abstracts in which genes and diseases are both mentioned

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call