Abstract

BackgroundObesity is one of the leading threats to global public health. It is consequent to abnormal energy metabolism. Currently, it has been well established that maternal exposure to environmental stressors that cause inappropriate fetal development may have long-term adverse effects on offspring energy metabolism in an exposure timing-dependent manner, known as developmental programming of health and diseases paradigm. Rapidly increasing evidence has indicated that maternal exposure to ambient fine particles (PM2.5) correlates to abnormal fetal development. In the present study, we therefore assessed whether maternal exposure to diesel exhaust PM2.5 (DEP), the major component of ambient PM2.5 in urban areas, programs offspring energy metabolism, and further examined how the timing of exposure impacts this programming.ResultsThe growth trajectory of offspring shows that although prenatal maternal exposure to DEP did not impact the birth weight of offspring, it significantly decreased offspring body weight from postnatal week 2 until the end of observation. This weight loss effect of prenatal maternal exposure to DEP coincided with decreased food intake but not alteration in brown adipose tissue (BAT) morphology. The hypophagic effect of prenatal maternal exposure to DEP was in concord with decreased hypothalamic expression of an orexigenic peptide NPY, suggesting that the prenatal maternal exposure to DEP impacts offspring energy balance primarily through programming of food intake. Paradoxically, the reduced body weight resulted from prenatal maternal exposure to DEP was accompanied by increased mass of epididymal adipose tissue, which was due to hyperplasia as morphological analysis did not observe any hypertrophy. In direct contrast, the postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams increased offspring body weight during lactation and adulthood, paralleled by markedly increased fat accumulation and decreased UCP1 expression in BAT but not alteration in food intake. The weight gain induced by postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams was also expressed as an increased adiposity. But it concurred with a marked hypertrophy of adipocytes.ConclusionPrenatal and postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams differentially program offspring energy metabolism, underscoring consideration of the exposure timing when examining the adverse effects of maternal exposure to ambient PM2.5.

Highlights

  • Obesity is one of the leading threats to global public health

  • As both prenatal and postnatal periods have been shown to be vulnerable to developmental programming [2], and one of the main objectives of the present study is to determine the window of developmental programming by maternal exposure to diesel exhaust PM2.5 (DEP), half offspring were switched between vehicle- and DEPexposed dams once born

  • The main findings in the present study include that 1) both prenatal and postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams programs offspring energy metabolism; 2) the programing of energy metabolism by them are markedly different: while prenatal mothering by DEPexposed dams leads to a weight loss, postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams results in a weight gain; 3) prenatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams increased the mass of epididymal adipose tissue through hyperplasia, whereas postnatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams increased the mass of all tested fat pads through hypertrophy; 4) while prenatal mothering by DEP-exposed dams programs offspring energy balance primarily through reduction in food intake, postnatal mothering by DEPexposed dams influence offspring energy balance primarily through induction of brown adipose tissue (BAT) whitening

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is one of the leading threats to global public health. It is consequent to abnormal energy metabolism. It has been well established that maternal exposure to environmental stressors that cause inappropriate fetal development may have long-term adverse effects on offspring energy metabolism in an exposure timing-dependent manner, known as developmental programming of health and diseases paradigm. Numerous studies have demonstrated that it may originate from early-life exposure to environmental stressors that cause inappropriate fetal and/or neonatal development, referred to as the developmental programming of health and diseases (DOHaD) paradigm [2]. A rapidly increasing number of epidemiological studies have shown that prenatal exposure to ambient fine particulate matter with a diameter ≤ 2.5 μm (PM2.5) is associated with a variety of manifestations of abnormal fetal development such as abortion, placental dysfunction, low birth weight and pre-term birth [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. How gestational PM2.5 exposure impacts energy metabolism and subsequently adiposity in adult offspring has not yet systemically investigated

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