Literature DB >> 29669306

Paternal exercise protects mouse offspring from high-fat-diet-induced type 2 diabetes risk by increasing skeletal muscle insulin signaling.

Danielle Krout1, James N Roemmich1, Amy Bundy1, Rolando A Garcia1, Lin Yan1, Kate J Claycombe-Larson2.   

Abstract

Paternal obesity increases, while paternal exercise decreases, offspring obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk; however, no studies have determined whether a paternal high-fat (HF) diet and exercise interact to alter offspring body weight (BW), adiposity and T2D risk. Three-week-old male C57BL/6 mice were fed a normal-fat (NF) diet (16% fat) or an HF diet (45% fat) and assigned to either voluntary wheel running exercise or cage activity for 3 months prior to mating with NF-diet-fed dams. After weaning, male offspring were fed an NF or HF diet for an additional 3 months. F1 male mice whose fathers ate an HF diet had decreased % body fat accompanied by decreased gene expression of beige adipocyte marker FGF21. However, paternal HF-diet-induced reductions in F1 offspring % body fat normalized but did not reduce T2D risk. Exercise was protective against paternal HF-diet-induced insulin resistance by increasing the expression of insulin signaling (GLUT4, IRS1 and PI3K) markers in skeletal muscle resulting in normal T2D risk. When fathers were fed an HF diet and exercised, a postnatal HF diet increased beiging (PPARγ). Thus, these findings show that increases in T2D risk in male offspring when the father consumes an HF diet can be normalized when the father also exercises preconception and that this protection may occur by increases in insulin signaling potential within offspring skeletal muscle. Future studies should further determine the physiological mechanism(s) underlying the beneficial effects of exercise through the paternal lineage. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Exercise; Insulin signaling; Obesity; Paternal high-fat diet; Type 2 diabetes

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29669306     DOI: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2018.03.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr Biochem        ISSN: 0955-2863            Impact factor:   6.048


  10 in total

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3.  Postnatal exercise protects offspring from high-fat diet-induced reductions in subcutaneous adipocyte beiging in C57Bl6/J mice.

Authors:  Kate J Claycombe-Larson; Amy Bundy; Elizabeth Black Lance; Diane C Darland; Shanon L Casperson; James N Roemmich
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  10 in total

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