Associations between obesity-related gene expression in maternal and cord blood and newborn adiposity: findings from the Araraquara Cohort study
Background/objectives Genes involved in the regulation of metabolism, adipose tissue deposition, inflammation, and the appetite-satiety axis may play an important role in fetal development, and possibly induce permanent metabolic changes and fat accumulation. In this study we investigated: (1) obesi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International Journal of Obesity 2021-09, Vol.45 (9), p.1958-1966 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background/objectives
Genes involved in the regulation of metabolism, adipose tissue deposition, inflammation, and the appetite-satiety axis may play an important role in fetal development, and possibly induce permanent metabolic changes and fat accumulation. In this study we investigated: (1) obesity-related gene expression in maternal and cord blood of overweight/obese and normal-weight pregnant women; (2) associations between obesity-related gene expression in maternal and cord blood; and (3) associations of gene expression in each of maternal and cord blood with newborn adiposity.
Subjects/methods
Twenty-five overweight/obese and 32 normal-weight pregnant women were selected from the Araraquara Cohort Study according to their pre-pregnancy BMI. Maternal and cord blood gene expression of
LEPR, STAT3, PPARG, TLR4, IL-6, IL-10, FTO, MC4R, TNF-α
, and
NFκB
were investigated by relative real-time PCR quantification. The body composition of the newborns was assessed by air displacement plethysmography. Associations between maternal and cord blood gene expression and markers of newborn adiposity (weight, BMI, and fat mass%) were explored by linear regression models controlling for maternal age, pre-pregnancy BMI, maternal gestational weight gain, gestational age, and newborn sex.
Results
There was higher
TLR4, NFκB
, and
TNF-a
expression, and lower
IL-6
expression, in overweight/obese pregnant women and their respective newborns compared with normal-weight women and their newborns (
p
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ISSN: | 0307-0565 1476-5497 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41366-021-00857-8 |