| Literature DB >> 32924159 |
Eva M Seipelt1,2, Franck Tourniaire1,3, Charlène Couturier1, Julien Astier1, Béatrice Loriod4, Hortense Vachon4, Michel Pucéat2, Lourdes Mounien1, Jean-François Landrier1,3.
Abstract
In utero environment is crucial to ensure normal development of the fetus and to program metabolic health throughout the life. Beside macronutrients, the role of micronutrients, including vitamin D, begins to be explore. The aim of this study was to decipher the impact of maternal vitamin D deficiency (VDD), in normal and high-fat (HF) diet context, on adipose tissue metabolism and energy homeostasis in offspring, considering sex-specific responses. Body weight, energy expenditure, and spontaneous activity was differential impacted in juvenile male and female offspring born from VDD mice. In adulthood, a HF diet combined with maternal VDD disrupted glucose homeostasis and adiposity in male offspring but not in females. Such phenotypes were associated to different transcriptomic profiles in adipose tissue, which could be related to differential modulation of plasma 17β-estradiol concentrations. Thus, maternal VDD sex-dependently modulated metabolic fate of the offspring, especially when associated with HF diet in adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: adipose tissue; maternal vitamin D deficiency; metabolism; offspring; vitamin D
Year: 2020 PMID: 32924159 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201902924RR
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191