Maternal high-fat-diet exposure is associated with elevated blood pressure and sustained increased leptin levels through epigenetic memory in offspring

Author:

Lin Xian-Hua,Gao Ling,Tian Shen,Klausen Christian,Guo Meng-Xi,Gao Qian,Liu Miao-E.,Wang Hui,Wu Dan-Dan,Zhou Cheng-Liang,Yang Jing,Meng Ye,Liu Ye,Xu Gu-Feng,Tan Ya-Jing,Ullah Kamran,Zhu Yi-Min,Fraser William D.,Sheng Jian-Zhong,Leung Peter C. K.,Muglia Louis J.,Wu Yan-Ting,Huang He-Feng

Abstract

AbstractMaternal metabolism dysregulation during pregnancy predisposes offspring to major diseases, including hypertension, in later life, but the mechanism involved remains to be fully elucidated. A high-fat-diet (HFD) pregnant rat model was used to investigate whether excessive intrauterine lipid exposure was associated with elevated blood pressure in offspring and increased levels of leptin, an important biomarker and mediator of vascular dysfunction and hypertension. We found that gestational hyperlipidemia predisposed offspring to blood pressure elevation and sustained increases in leptin levels with no difference in body weight in the rat model. Increased leptin expression and leptin promoter hypomethylation were found in adipose tissues of HFD-exposed offspring. The treatment of mesenchymal stem cells with free fatty acids during adipogenic differentiation resulted in increased leptin expression, accompanied by leptin promoter hypomethylation. In addition, we also followed up 121 children to evaluate the association between maternal triglyceride levels and offspring blood pressure. Consistent with the animal study results, we observed elevated serum leptin levels and blood pressure in the offspring born to women with gestational hypertriglyceridemia. Our findings provide new insights that maternal hyperlipidemia is associated with elevated blood pressure in offspring and is associated with increases in leptin levels through epigenetic memory.

Funder

The National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Chinese National Key Research and Development Award

International Cooperation Project of China and Canada NSFC

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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