Rates of pediatric obesity are continuously rising and are likely to translate into high incidence of metabolic disease later in life. Maternal exercise during pregnancy has been established as a useful non-pharmacological intervention to improve infant metabolic health; however, mechanistic insight behind these adaptations remains mostly confined to animal models. Infant mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) give rise to a multitude of infant peripheral tissue (e.g., skeletal muscle) and remain involved in mature tissue repair and maintenance. Importantly, these cells preserve the phenotype of an offspring donor and represent a model for the investigation of mechanisms behind infant metabolic health improvements. We used undifferentiated MSC collected during a randomized controlled trial to investigate if maternal exercise, regardless of exercise mode, affects infant adiposity and fatty acid oxidation. Compared to control, we observed >160% higher neutral lipid content in Ex-MSCs (p<0.01). However, this finding was coupled with significantly higher complete fatty acid oxidation to CO2 and lower incomplete fat oxidation (ASM production) in Ex-MSCs (p≤0.05). Infants in the exercise group had significantly lower body fat percentage compared to same age infants of controls at one month of age (p≤0.05). There was no difference in lean body mass volume (p>0.05) or infant one-month BMI (p=0.069). Together, these data indicate that maternal exercise exposure in utero is still associated with decreased infant adiposity one month after birth. MSC lipid content was positively associated with maternal fitness and exercise volume (p<0.01) during pregnancy. Finally, an increase in average maternal exercise volume (MET*min/wk; r=-0.4, p≤0.05) and total gestational MET*min (r=-0.36, p≤0.05), but not VO2max (p=0.07) was associated with infant 1-month body fat percentage. Together, these data showcase the influence of maternal exercise exposure on improvements in cellular metabolism and at 1 month of age. Collectively, our data suggests that exposure to maternal exercise could contribute to lower adiposity in early infancy. This project was supported by the American Heart Association (18IPA34150006 to L.E.M.). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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