Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate cellular apoptosis in prenatal glucocorticoid overexposure and a postnatal high fat diet in rats. Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats at gestational days 14 to 21 were administered saline (vehicle) or dexamethasone and weaned onto either a normal fat diet or a high fat diet for 180 days; in total four experimental groups were designated, i.e., vehicle treated group (VEH), dexamethasone treated group (DEX), vehicle treated plus high-fat diet (VHF), and dexamethasone treated plus high-fat diet (DHF). Chronic effects of prenatal liver programming were assessed at postnatal day 180. The apoptotic pathways involved proteins were analyzed by Western blotting for their expressions. Apoptosis and liver steatosis were also examined by histology. We found that liver steatosis and apoptosis were increased in the DHF, DEX, and VHF treated groups, and that the DHF treated group was increased at higher levels than the DEX and VHF treated groups. The expression of leptin was decreased more in the DHF treated group than in the DEX and VHF treated groups. Decreased peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1α, phosphoinositide-3-kinase, manganese superoxide dismutase and increased malondialdehyde expression levels were seen in DHF treated group relative to the DEX treated group. The DHF treated group exhibited higher levels of oxidative stress, apoptosis and liver steatosis than the DEX treated group. These results indicate that the environment of high-fat diet plays an important role in the development of liver injury after prenatal stress.

Highlights

  • Administered glucocorticoid results in changes in certain tissues that persist throughout life [1,2]

  • The total cholesterol level increased the most in the dexamethasone treated group (DEX) treated group and increased in the DHF treated group compared to the vehicle treated group

  • Triglyceride increased in the DEX treated group but did not show significant change in the DHF treated group compared to the vehicle treated group

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Summary

Introduction

Administered glucocorticoid results in changes in certain tissues (e.g., liver) that persist throughout life [1,2]. Prenatal dexamethasone programs expression of adipose tissue and increase hepatic lipid accumulation in liver on a high-fat diet [3,4]. It is reported that the deleterious effects of high-fat diet on perinatal and post-weaning periods will be transmitted to adult rat offspring [4,5]. This leads to intrahepatic lipid accumulation and a decreased metabolic flexibility [6]. The more important issue is that prenatal dexamethasone and postnatal high fat diet synergistically induce programmed disease in adult offspring [7]. The detrimental effect of high-fat diet in childhood or adult was fatty liver; tied to mitochondria of oxidative phosphorylation [9]

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