| Literature DB >> 19794064 |
Clive J Petry1, Mark L Evans, Dianne L Wingate, Ken K Ong, Wolf Reik, Miguel Constância, David B Dunger.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We have hypothesized that variation in imprinted growth-promoting fetal genes may affect maternal glucose concentrations in pregnancy. To test this hypothesis we evaluated the effects of fetal disruption of murine H19(Delta13) on maternal glucose concentrations in pregnancy. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Experimental mice were pregnant females that had inherited the disrupted H19(Delta13) from their fathers and were therefore phenotypically wild type due to imprinting; approximately half of their litters were null for H19(Delta13) through maternal inheritance of the disrupted gene. In control mice approximately half the litter paternally inherited the disrupted H19(Delta13), so the pups were either genetically wild type or phenotypically wild type due to imprinting. Blood glucose concentrations were assessed by intraperitoneal glucose tolerance tests on days 1, 16, and 18 of pregnancy.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19794064 PMCID: PMC2797934 DOI: 10.2337/db09-0757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
FIG. 1.Schematic of the matings in the H19Δ knockout study. Male mice are represented by squares and female mice by circles. Wild-type mice are represented by solid black shapes and heterozygote knockout mice by half-solid black shapes and half-striped shapes (the stripes are on the left-hand side if the disrupted allele was inherited from the father and on the right-hand side if it was inherited from the mother). Penetrance of the disrupted allele is estimated to be 50% in each case, and half of the offspring are assumed to be males. All the experimental mothers, although they were heterozygous H19Δ knockouts, were phenotypically wild type due to having inherited the disrupted allele from their fathers and imprinting.
Fasting plasma insulin and Igf-ii concentrations, with fasting insulin sensitivities on days 1, 16, and 18 of pregnancy in mice carrying litters containing H19Δknockout pups
| Experimental mice | Controls | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | ( | ( | |
| Insulin (pmol/l) | 46 (35–74) | 35 (35–61) | 0.4 |
| Igf-ii (ng/ml) | All <6 | All <6 | 1.0 |
| Insulin sensitivity (HOMA %S) | 113.9 (64.3–147.8) | 140.0 (78.6–145.1) | 0.8 |
| Day 16 | ( | ( | |
| Insulin (pmol/l) | 137 (92–237) | 112 (52–154) | 0.3 |
| Igf-ii (ng/ml) | All <6 | All <6 | 1.0 |
| Insulin sensitivity (HOMA %S) | 40 (23–61) | 50 (40–119) | 0.2 |
| Day 18 | ( | ( | |
| Insulin (pmol/l) | 111 (63–279) | 141 (83–1,472) | 0.7 |
| Igf-ii (ng/ml) | All <6 | All <6 | 1.0 |
| Insulin sensitivity (HOMA %S) | 52 (21–102) | 40 (6–65) | 0.8 |
Data are median (interquartile range).
FIG. 2.Intraperitoneal GTT curves of pregnant mice carrying litters containing H19Δ knockout pups on day 16 of pregnancy and total AUC bar charts. Each time point in the GTT is presented as a mean ± SEM, with the total AUCs as mean (95% CI).
FIG. 3.Intraperitoneal GTT curves of pregnant mice carrying litters containing H19Δ knockout pups on day 18 of pregnancy and total AUC bar charts. Each time point in the GTT is presented as a mean ± SEM, with the total AUCs as mean (95% CI).