Maternal nutrient restriction alters gene expression in the ovine fetal heart
Adequate maternal nutrient supply is critical for normal fetal organogenesis. We previously demonstrated that a global 50% nutrient restriction during the first half of gestation causes compensatory growth of both the left and right ventricles of the fetal heart by day 78 of gestation. Thus, it was...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2004-07, Vol.558 (1), p.111-121 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Adequate maternal nutrient supply is critical for normal fetal organogenesis. We previously demonstrated that a global 50%
nutrient restriction during the first half of gestation causes compensatory growth of both the left and right ventricles of
the fetal heart by day 78 of gestation. Thus, it was hypothesized that maternal nutrient restriction significantly altered
gene expression in the fetal cardiac left ventricle (LV). Pregnant ewes were randomly grouped into control (100% national
research council (NRC) requirements) or nutrient-restricted groups (50% NRC requirements) from day 28 to day 78 of gestation,
at which time fetal LV were collected. Fetal LV mRNA was used to construct a suppression subtraction cDNA library from which
11 cDNA clones were found by differential dot blot hybridization and virtual Northern analysis to be up-regulated by maternal
nutrient restriction: caveolin, stathmin, G-1 cyclin, α-actin, titin, cardiac ankyrin repeat protein (CARP), cardiac-specific
RNA-helicase activated by MEF2C (CHAMP), endothelial and smooth muscle derived neuropilin (ESDN), prostatic binding protein,
NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2, and an unknown protein. Six of these clones (cardiac α-actin, cyclin G1, stathmin, NADH dehydrogenase
subunit 2, titin and prostatic binding protein) have been linked to cardiac hypertrophy in other species including humans.
Of the remaining clones, caveolin, CARP and CHAMP have been shown to inhibit remodelling of hypertrophic tissue. Compensatory
growth of fetal LV in response to maternal undernutrition is concluded to be associated with increased transcription of genes
related to cardiac hypertrophy, compensatory growth or remodelling. Counter-regulatory gene transcription may be increased,
in part, as a response to moderating the degree of cardiac remodelling. The short- and long-term consequences of these changes
in fetal heart gene expression and induction of specific homeostatic mechanisms in response to maternal undernutrition remain
to be determined. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2004.061697 |