| Literature DB >> 30463313 |
Nada A Sallam1,2,3, Victoria A C Palmgren4, Radha D Singh5,6, Cini M John7, Jennifer A Thompson8,9.
Abstract
With the rising global tide of obesity, gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) burgeoned into one of the most common antenatal disorders worldwide. Macrosomic babies born to diabetic mothers are more likely to develop risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) before they reach adulthood. Rodent studies in offspring born to hyperglycemic pregnancies show vascular dysfunction characterized by impaired nitric oxide (NO)-mediated vasodilation and increased production of contractile prostanoids by cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2). Vascular dysfunction is a key pathogenic event in the progression of diabetes-related vascular disease, primarily attributable to glucotoxicity. Therefore, glucose-induced vascular injury may stem directly from the hyperglycemic intrauterine environment of GDM pregnancy, as evinced by studies showing endothelial activation and inflammation at birth or in childhood in offspring born to GDM mothers. This review discusses potential mechanisms by which intrauterine hyperglycemia programs dysfunction in the developing vasculature.Entities:
Keywords: developmental programming; endothelial dysfunction; gestational diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30463313 PMCID: PMC6275067 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19113665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Human evidence for programming of vascular dysfunction after GDM exposure.
| Age Group | Examined Tissue/ParameTer | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| At birth | HUVEC | Reduced proliferation, tubule formation and migration capacity, increased apoptosis, higher superoxide production and markers of oxidative stress, decreased NO availability, increased monocyte adhesion, heightened inflammatory response | [ |
| ECFC | Reduced ECFC number and impaired proliferation, migration and tubule formation | [ | |
| Cord blood | Increased markers of lipid peroxidation, change in DNA methylation status of genes involved in lipid metabolism and atherosclerosis | [ | |
| Infants (3–5 days old) | Abdominal aorta | Greater aortic intima-media thickness after adjustment for body weight | [ |
| Children/adolescent (2–18 years old) | Blood | Increased triglycerides, increased cell adhesion molecules (CAM), change in DNA methylation pattern of genes involved in atherosclerosis and CAM expression | [ |
| Haemodynamics | High systolic blood pressure, positive association between umbilical insulin levels and augmentation index | [ |
Figure 1Mechanisms linking gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) to vascular dysfunction in the offspring. Maternal hyperglycemia exposes the fetus to high levels of glucose. Deleterious effects of hyperglycemia are mediated largely through inflammation and oxidative stress. Highly interrelated pathways of inflammatory and redox signaling are persistently dysregulated after transient hyperglycemia due to transcriptional programming by DNA or histone methylation. Studies in endothelial colony forming cells (ECFC) and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) collected from GDM pregnancies suggest that intrauterine hyperglycemia directly programs vascular dysfunction by modulating methylation patterns and increasing oxidant load and inflammation. Chronic oxidative stress and inflammation lead to endothelial dysfunction characterized by decreased endothelium-derived dilators (NO) and increased contractile mediators (COX-2 prostanoids).