Science Inventory

Offspring Susceptibility to Metabolic Alterations Due to Maternal High-Fat Diet and the Impact of Inhaled Ozone Used as a Stressor

Citation:

Snow, S., K. Broniowska, E. Karoly, A. Henriquez, P. Phillips, A. Ledbetter, M. Schladweiler, C. Miller, C. Gordon, AND U. Kodavanti. Offspring Susceptibility to Metabolic Alterations Due to Maternal High-Fat Diet and the Impact of Inhaled Ozone Used as a Stressor. Scientific Reports. Nature Publishing Group, London, Uk, 10:16353, (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73361-0

Impact/Purpose:

In this study, we examined the influence of maternal HFD on metabolic responses to ozone in young Long-Evans rat offspring. We demonstrated that maternal HFD increases offspring susceptibility to metabolic alterations in a sex-specific manner when challenged with environmental stressors.

Description:

The influence of maternal high-fat diet (HFD) on metabolic response to ozone was examined in Long-Evans rat offspring. F0 females were fed control diet (CD; 10%kcal from fat) or HFD (60%kcal from fat) starting at post-natal day (PND) 30. Rats were bred on PND 72. Dietary regimen was maintained until PND 30 when all offspring were switched to CD. On PND 40, F1 offspring (n = 10/group/sex) were exposed to air or 0.8 ppm ozone for 5 h. Serum samples were collected for global metabolomic analysis (n = 8/group/sex). Offspring from HFD dams had increased body fat and weight relative to CD. Metabolomic analysis revealed significant sex-, diet-, and exposure-related changes. Maternal HFD increased free fatty acids and decreased phospholipids (male > female) in air-exposed rats. Microbiome-associated histidine and tyrosine metabolites were increased in both sexes, while 1,5-anhydroglucitol levels decreased in males indicating susceptibility to insulin resistance. Ozone decreased monohydroxy fatty acids and acyl carnitines and increased pyruvate along with TCA cycle intermediates in females (HFD > CD). Ozone increased various amino acids, polyamines, and metabolites of gut microbiota in HFD female offspring indicating gut microbiome alterations. Collectively, these data suggest that maternal HFD increases offspring susceptibility to metabolic alterations in a sex-specific manner when challenged with environmental stressors.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:10/01/2020
Record Last Revised:10/15/2020
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 349854