Cargando…

Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes

We previously demonstrated that paternal obesity is associated with offspring metabolic risk during later life, and that paternal SGLT2i treatment improves offspring metabolic phenotypes. Since the placenta is a key determinant of prenatal growth and development, we hypothesized the placenta could m...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Su, Lei, Osataphan, Soravis, Desmond, Jessica, Fang, Rui, Chimene-Weiss, Jeremy, Zhou, Liyuan, Efthymiou, Vissarion, Dreyfuss, Jonathan, Pan, Hui, Patti, Mary-Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089822/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1530
_version_ 1783687131590295552
author Su, Lei
Osataphan, Soravis
Desmond, Jessica
Fang, Rui
Chimene-Weiss, Jeremy
Zhou, Liyuan
Efthymiou, Vissarion
Dreyfuss, Jonathan
Pan, Hui
Patti, Mary-Elizabeth
author_facet Su, Lei
Osataphan, Soravis
Desmond, Jessica
Fang, Rui
Chimene-Weiss, Jeremy
Zhou, Liyuan
Efthymiou, Vissarion
Dreyfuss, Jonathan
Pan, Hui
Patti, Mary-Elizabeth
author_sort Su, Lei
collection PubMed
description We previously demonstrated that paternal obesity is associated with offspring metabolic risk during later life, and that paternal SGLT2i treatment improves offspring metabolic phenotypes. Since the placenta is a key determinant of prenatal growth and development, we hypothesized the placenta could mediate the impact of paternal obesity and paternal SGLT2i treatment. Male C57BL/6J mice were fed standard chow (Purina 9F) or 60% high-fat diet (HFD, D12492, Research Diet), or 60% HFD plus the SGLT2 inhibitor canagliflozin (CANA, 25 mg/kg/d) for 4 weeks before mating with chow-fed females. Placenta were collected on E16.5, and RNA-seq was performed on placenta from male offspring (paternal chow, pChow, n=4, pHFD, n=5, and pHFD+CANA, n=4), and differentially expressed genes were identified using Limma. Placenta weight was significantly lower in pHFD (0.089±0.004 g, 7 litters from 6 fathers) vs. both pChow (0.108±0.011 g, 4 litters, 4 fathers) and pHFD+CANA (0.107±0.013 g, 5 litters, 5 fathers)(p<0.05). Litter size, fetal or liver weight, or fetal/placental weight ratio did not differ between groups. No genes were differentially expressed in pHFD vs. pChow (FDR<0.1). Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) identified significance (FDR<0.05, NES>1.8) for gene sets in steroid metabolic, drug catabolic, and protein-containing complex remodeling processes. Genes responsible for enrichment included cholesterol biosynthesis (Hmgcs1), transport (Apob, Apoa1/2/4, Apom, Apoc1, Vldlr, Pcsk9) and steroid hormone biosynthesis genes (Hsd3b1, Cyp11b1), all upregulated in pHFD by 1.5-3-fold. These results suggest pHFD could potentially affect maternal and fetal cholesterol homeostasis. pHFD+CANA altered expression of 154 genes vs. pHFD (7 up-, 147 down, FDR <0.1, FC >|1.5|); 18 gene sets were downregulated by pHFD+CANA (GSEA NES<-1.8 and FDR<0.05), including the 3 sets upregulated by pHFD. ChEA3 enrichment analysis (ENCODE library) predicted regulation by transcription factors important for cholesterol and sterol biosynthesis (Srebf1/2), embryonic development (Foxa2), & glucose homeostasis (Hnf4g), suggesting these pathways could mediate the “rescue” effect of pHFD+CANA (FDR<0.05). Expression of Foxa2 was significantly downregulated (4-fold) in pHFD+CANA vs. pHFD. We independently analyzed expression of the 78 detected imprinted genes. None were significantly different in pHFD, but both paternally expressed (Nnat) and maternally expressed genes (H19, Phlda2, Meg3, Meg8) were downregulated in pHFD+CANA vs. pHFD by 1.4 to 3.8 fold in pHFD+CANA (p<0.001,FDR<0.1). In summary, paternal SGLT2i reversed the impact of pHFD on placental weight. Robust impact of both pHFD and pSGLT2i on the transcriptome suggests that the placenta is a key mediator of paternal metabolic effects on offspring development and metabolic disease risk, potentially via modification of lipid transport.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8089822
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80898222021-05-06 Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes Su, Lei Osataphan, Soravis Desmond, Jessica Fang, Rui Chimene-Weiss, Jeremy Zhou, Liyuan Efthymiou, Vissarion Dreyfuss, Jonathan Pan, Hui Patti, Mary-Elizabeth J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology We previously demonstrated that paternal obesity is associated with offspring metabolic risk during later life, and that paternal SGLT2i treatment improves offspring metabolic phenotypes. Since the placenta is a key determinant of prenatal growth and development, we hypothesized the placenta could mediate the impact of paternal obesity and paternal SGLT2i treatment. Male C57BL/6J mice were fed standard chow (Purina 9F) or 60% high-fat diet (HFD, D12492, Research Diet), or 60% HFD plus the SGLT2 inhibitor canagliflozin (CANA, 25 mg/kg/d) for 4 weeks before mating with chow-fed females. Placenta were collected on E16.5, and RNA-seq was performed on placenta from male offspring (paternal chow, pChow, n=4, pHFD, n=5, and pHFD+CANA, n=4), and differentially expressed genes were identified using Limma. Placenta weight was significantly lower in pHFD (0.089±0.004 g, 7 litters from 6 fathers) vs. both pChow (0.108±0.011 g, 4 litters, 4 fathers) and pHFD+CANA (0.107±0.013 g, 5 litters, 5 fathers)(p<0.05). Litter size, fetal or liver weight, or fetal/placental weight ratio did not differ between groups. No genes were differentially expressed in pHFD vs. pChow (FDR<0.1). Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) identified significance (FDR<0.05, NES>1.8) for gene sets in steroid metabolic, drug catabolic, and protein-containing complex remodeling processes. Genes responsible for enrichment included cholesterol biosynthesis (Hmgcs1), transport (Apob, Apoa1/2/4, Apom, Apoc1, Vldlr, Pcsk9) and steroid hormone biosynthesis genes (Hsd3b1, Cyp11b1), all upregulated in pHFD by 1.5-3-fold. These results suggest pHFD could potentially affect maternal and fetal cholesterol homeostasis. pHFD+CANA altered expression of 154 genes vs. pHFD (7 up-, 147 down, FDR <0.1, FC >|1.5|); 18 gene sets were downregulated by pHFD+CANA (GSEA NES<-1.8 and FDR<0.05), including the 3 sets upregulated by pHFD. ChEA3 enrichment analysis (ENCODE library) predicted regulation by transcription factors important for cholesterol and sterol biosynthesis (Srebf1/2), embryonic development (Foxa2), & glucose homeostasis (Hnf4g), suggesting these pathways could mediate the “rescue” effect of pHFD+CANA (FDR<0.05). Expression of Foxa2 was significantly downregulated (4-fold) in pHFD+CANA vs. pHFD. We independently analyzed expression of the 78 detected imprinted genes. None were significantly different in pHFD, but both paternally expressed (Nnat) and maternally expressed genes (H19, Phlda2, Meg3, Meg8) were downregulated in pHFD+CANA vs. pHFD by 1.4 to 3.8 fold in pHFD+CANA (p<0.001,FDR<0.1). In summary, paternal SGLT2i reversed the impact of pHFD on placental weight. Robust impact of both pHFD and pSGLT2i on the transcriptome suggests that the placenta is a key mediator of paternal metabolic effects on offspring development and metabolic disease risk, potentially via modification of lipid transport. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8089822/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1530 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Reproductive Endocrinology
Su, Lei
Osataphan, Soravis
Desmond, Jessica
Fang, Rui
Chimene-Weiss, Jeremy
Zhou, Liyuan
Efthymiou, Vissarion
Dreyfuss, Jonathan
Pan, Hui
Patti, Mary-Elizabeth
Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title_full Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title_fullStr Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title_full_unstemmed Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title_short Paternal Obesity and SGLT2 Inhibition Alter Expression of Placental Regulatory Genes
title_sort paternal obesity and sglt2 inhibition alter expression of placental regulatory genes
topic Reproductive Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089822/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1530
work_keys_str_mv AT sulei paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT osataphansoravis paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT desmondjessica paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT fangrui paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT chimeneweissjeremy paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT zhouliyuan paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT efthymiouvissarion paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT dreyfussjonathan paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT panhui paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes
AT pattimaryelizabeth paternalobesityandsglt2inhibitionalterexpressionofplacentalregulatorygenes