Effects of postnatal and maternal diet-induced obesity on physiology and vascular function
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Dakin2012.doc (5.821Mb)
Date
30/11/2012Author
Dakin, Rachel Sarah
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Abstract
In recent years there has been an explosion in the rates of obesity, defined as a body mass
index greater than 30kg/ m2, and associated cardiovascular disease. Alterations in peripheral
glucocorticoid metabolism have been suggested to play a role in the development of obesity.
Obesity occurs in both sexes, but the risk of associated metabolic disturbance and vascular
dysfunction is greater in men. Although there is no accepted definition of obesity in rodents,
the term is used to describe animals with a significant increase in fat pad mass often
achieved by feeding a high fat diet. Although animal models of obesity have been useful in
delineating potential mechanisms linking obesity with its metabolic and vascular sequelae,
most studies have been in male animals and, thus, have not addressed sex differences.
Additionally, emerging evidence shows that obesity during pregnancy is associated with
increased cardio-metabolic and vascular disease in offspring, although the processes
underlying such ‘programming’ effects are unclear.
This thesis addresses the hypothesis that exposure to postnatal, or maternal obesity will alter
both metabolism and vascular function in mice.
Male and female mice maintained on a high fat and sugar diet from 5 weeks of age had
increased adipose tissue deposition in adulthood. However there were striking sex
differences in glucose homeostasis, mRNA levels and glucocorticoid metabolism, with males
being more severely affected. Treatment of male mice with 17β-estradiol ameliorated a
number of the effects of the high fat diet, including weight gain and altered glucose
homeostasis; additionally estradiol altered glucocorticoid metabolism in the adipose so that it
resembled that of females. Suprisingly, given the changes in metabolism, obesity in adult
mice produced only small changes in vascular function and did not alter vascular
remodelling following injury.
The effects of maternal obesity were studied using male offspring aged 3 and 6 months. The
offspring of obese mothers had similar body weight, adiposity, plasma lipid and plasma
hormone concentrations to controls. In contrast, exposure to obesity in utero was associated
with receptor specific changes in agonist-mediated contraction and decreased endothelium-dependent
relaxation in male offspring. Despite these changes in vascular function, no
alterations in blood pressure or vascular remodelling following injury were present.
These results demonstrate that the more profound changes in glucose-insulin homeostasis
associated with obesity in male humans can be recapitulated in rodent models and imply that
estradiol plays a role in protecting the metabolism of female mice, potentially by alteration
of glucocorticoid metabolism. Despite altered metabolism in postnatal obesity vascular
function remained normal suggesting metabolic and vascular dysfunction are not
intrinsically linked. Conversely, maternal obesity did not cause any overt changes in
offspring metabolism but caused vascular dysfunction implying these parameters can be
programmed independently.