Cargando…

Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring

Excess vitamin intake during pregnancy leads to obesogenic phenotypes, and folic acid accounts for many of these effects in male, but not in female, offspring. These outcomes may be modulated by another methyl nutrient choline and attributed to the gut microbiota. Pregnant Wistar rats were fed an AI...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mjaaseth, Ulrik N., Norris, Jackson C., Aardema, Niklas D. J., Bunnell, Madison L., Ward, Robert E., Hintze, Korry J., Cho, Clara E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8705167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34960062
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13124510
_version_ 1784621879442538496
author Mjaaseth, Ulrik N.
Norris, Jackson C.
Aardema, Niklas D. J.
Bunnell, Madison L.
Ward, Robert E.
Hintze, Korry J.
Cho, Clara E.
author_facet Mjaaseth, Ulrik N.
Norris, Jackson C.
Aardema, Niklas D. J.
Bunnell, Madison L.
Ward, Robert E.
Hintze, Korry J.
Cho, Clara E.
author_sort Mjaaseth, Ulrik N.
collection PubMed
description Excess vitamin intake during pregnancy leads to obesogenic phenotypes, and folic acid accounts for many of these effects in male, but not in female, offspring. These outcomes may be modulated by another methyl nutrient choline and attributed to the gut microbiota. Pregnant Wistar rats were fed an AIN-93G diet with recommended vitamin (RV), high 10-fold multivitamin (HV), high 10-fold folic acid with recommended choline (HFol) or high 10-fold folic acid without choline (HFol-C) content. Male and female offspring were weaned to a high-fat RV diet for 12 weeks post-weaning. Removing choline from the HFol gestational diet resulted in obesogenic phenotypes that resembled more closely to HV in male and female offspring with higher body weight, food intake, glucose response to a glucose load and body fat percentage with altered activity, concentrations of short-chain fatty acids and gut microbiota composition. Gestational diet and sex of the offspring predicted the gut microbiota differences. Differentially abundant microbes may be important contributors to obesogenic outcomes across diet and sex. In conclusion, a gestational diet high in vitamins or imbalanced folic acid and choline content contributes to the gut microbiota alterations consistent with the obesogenic phenotypes of in male and female offspring.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8705167
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87051672021-12-25 Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring Mjaaseth, Ulrik N. Norris, Jackson C. Aardema, Niklas D. J. Bunnell, Madison L. Ward, Robert E. Hintze, Korry J. Cho, Clara E. Nutrients Article Excess vitamin intake during pregnancy leads to obesogenic phenotypes, and folic acid accounts for many of these effects in male, but not in female, offspring. These outcomes may be modulated by another methyl nutrient choline and attributed to the gut microbiota. Pregnant Wistar rats were fed an AIN-93G diet with recommended vitamin (RV), high 10-fold multivitamin (HV), high 10-fold folic acid with recommended choline (HFol) or high 10-fold folic acid without choline (HFol-C) content. Male and female offspring were weaned to a high-fat RV diet for 12 weeks post-weaning. Removing choline from the HFol gestational diet resulted in obesogenic phenotypes that resembled more closely to HV in male and female offspring with higher body weight, food intake, glucose response to a glucose load and body fat percentage with altered activity, concentrations of short-chain fatty acids and gut microbiota composition. Gestational diet and sex of the offspring predicted the gut microbiota differences. Differentially abundant microbes may be important contributors to obesogenic outcomes across diet and sex. In conclusion, a gestational diet high in vitamins or imbalanced folic acid and choline content contributes to the gut microbiota alterations consistent with the obesogenic phenotypes of in male and female offspring. MDPI 2021-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8705167/ /pubmed/34960062 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13124510 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mjaaseth, Ulrik N.
Norris, Jackson C.
Aardema, Niklas D. J.
Bunnell, Madison L.
Ward, Robert E.
Hintze, Korry J.
Cho, Clara E.
Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title_full Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title_fullStr Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title_full_unstemmed Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title_short Excess Vitamins or Imbalance of Folic Acid and Choline in the Gestational Diet Alter the Gut Microbiota and Obesogenic Effects in Wistar Rat Offspring
title_sort excess vitamins or imbalance of folic acid and choline in the gestational diet alter the gut microbiota and obesogenic effects in wistar rat offspring
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8705167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34960062
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13124510
work_keys_str_mv AT mjaasethulrikn excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT norrisjacksonc excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT aardemaniklasdj excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT bunnellmadisonl excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT wardroberte excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT hintzekorryj excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring
AT choclarae excessvitaminsorimbalanceoffolicacidandcholineinthegestationaldietalterthegutmicrobiotaandobesogeniceffectsinwistarratoffspring