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Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity

Epidemiological findings indicate that transient environmental influences during perinatal life, especially nutrition, may have deleterious heritable health effects lasting for the entire life. Indeed, the fetal organism develops specific adaptations that permanently change its physiology/metabolism...

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Autores principales: Jousse, Céline, Muranishi, Yuki, Parry, Laurent, Montaurier, Christophe, Even, Patrick, Launay, Jean-Marie, Carraro, Valérie, Maurin, Anne-Catherine, Averous, Julien, Chaveroux, Cédric, Bruhat, Alain, Mallet, Jacques, Morio, Béatrice, Fafournoux, Pierre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4132016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25118945
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104896
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author Jousse, Céline
Muranishi, Yuki
Parry, Laurent
Montaurier, Christophe
Even, Patrick
Launay, Jean-Marie
Carraro, Valérie
Maurin, Anne-Catherine
Averous, Julien
Chaveroux, Cédric
Bruhat, Alain
Mallet, Jacques
Morio, Béatrice
Fafournoux, Pierre
author_facet Jousse, Céline
Muranishi, Yuki
Parry, Laurent
Montaurier, Christophe
Even, Patrick
Launay, Jean-Marie
Carraro, Valérie
Maurin, Anne-Catherine
Averous, Julien
Chaveroux, Cédric
Bruhat, Alain
Mallet, Jacques
Morio, Béatrice
Fafournoux, Pierre
author_sort Jousse, Céline
collection PubMed
description Epidemiological findings indicate that transient environmental influences during perinatal life, especially nutrition, may have deleterious heritable health effects lasting for the entire life. Indeed, the fetal organism develops specific adaptations that permanently change its physiology/metabolism and that persist even in the absence of the stimulus that initiated them. This process is termed “nutritional programming”. We previously demonstrated that mothers fed a Low-Protein-Diet (LPD) during gestation and lactation give birth to F1-LPD animals presenting metabolic consequences that are different from those observed when the nutritional stress is applied during gestation only. Compared to control mice, adult F1-LPD animals have a lower body weight and exhibit a higher food intake suggesting that maternal protein under-nutrition during gestation and lactation affects the energy metabolism of F1-LPD offspring. In this study, we investigated the origin of this apparent energy wasting process in F1-LPD and demonstrated that minimal energy expenditure is increased, due to both an increased mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle and an increased mitochondrial density in White Adipose Tissue. Importantly, F1-LPD mice are protected against high-fat-diet-induced obesity. Clearly, different paradigms of exposure to malnutrition may be associated with differences in energy expenditure, food intake, weight and different susceptibilities to various symptoms associated with metabolic syndrome. Taken together these results demonstrate that intra-uterine environment is a major contributor to the future of individuals and disturbance at a critical period of development may compromise their health. Consequently, understanding the molecular mechanisms may give access to useful knowledge regarding the onset of metabolic diseases.
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spelling pubmed-41320162014-08-19 Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity Jousse, Céline Muranishi, Yuki Parry, Laurent Montaurier, Christophe Even, Patrick Launay, Jean-Marie Carraro, Valérie Maurin, Anne-Catherine Averous, Julien Chaveroux, Cédric Bruhat, Alain Mallet, Jacques Morio, Béatrice Fafournoux, Pierre PLoS One Research Article Epidemiological findings indicate that transient environmental influences during perinatal life, especially nutrition, may have deleterious heritable health effects lasting for the entire life. Indeed, the fetal organism develops specific adaptations that permanently change its physiology/metabolism and that persist even in the absence of the stimulus that initiated them. This process is termed “nutritional programming”. We previously demonstrated that mothers fed a Low-Protein-Diet (LPD) during gestation and lactation give birth to F1-LPD animals presenting metabolic consequences that are different from those observed when the nutritional stress is applied during gestation only. Compared to control mice, adult F1-LPD animals have a lower body weight and exhibit a higher food intake suggesting that maternal protein under-nutrition during gestation and lactation affects the energy metabolism of F1-LPD offspring. In this study, we investigated the origin of this apparent energy wasting process in F1-LPD and demonstrated that minimal energy expenditure is increased, due to both an increased mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle and an increased mitochondrial density in White Adipose Tissue. Importantly, F1-LPD mice are protected against high-fat-diet-induced obesity. Clearly, different paradigms of exposure to malnutrition may be associated with differences in energy expenditure, food intake, weight and different susceptibilities to various symptoms associated with metabolic syndrome. Taken together these results demonstrate that intra-uterine environment is a major contributor to the future of individuals and disturbance at a critical period of development may compromise their health. Consequently, understanding the molecular mechanisms may give access to useful knowledge regarding the onset of metabolic diseases. Public Library of Science 2014-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4132016/ /pubmed/25118945 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104896 Text en © 2014 Jousse et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jousse, Céline
Muranishi, Yuki
Parry, Laurent
Montaurier, Christophe
Even, Patrick
Launay, Jean-Marie
Carraro, Valérie
Maurin, Anne-Catherine
Averous, Julien
Chaveroux, Cédric
Bruhat, Alain
Mallet, Jacques
Morio, Béatrice
Fafournoux, Pierre
Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title_full Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title_fullStr Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title_full_unstemmed Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title_short Perinatal Protein Malnutrition Affects Mitochondrial Function in Adult and Results in a Resistance to High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity
title_sort perinatal protein malnutrition affects mitochondrial function in adult and results in a resistance to high fat diet-induced obesity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4132016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25118945
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104896
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