...
首页> 外文期刊>Physiological Reports >Paternal obesity induces metabolic and sperm disturbances in male offspring that are exacerbated by their exposure to an “obesogenic” diet
【24h】

Paternal obesity induces metabolic and sperm disturbances in male offspring that are exacerbated by their exposure to an “obesogenic” diet

机译:父亲肥胖会导致雄性后代的代谢和精子紊乱,而这种情况会因其暴露于“致肥胖”饮食而加剧

获取原文
   

获取外文期刊封面封底 >>

       

摘要

AbstractObesity and related comorbidities are becoming increasingly prevalent globally. In mice preconception paternal exposure to a high fat diet (HFD) impairs the metabolic and reproductive health of male offspring, despite their control diet (CD) consumption. However, offspring share lifestyle, including diet, with parents. We assessed if male offspring from HFD fathers have a heightened susceptibility to HFD-induced metabolic and reproductive derangements. This 2 × 2 design saw founder males (F0) and their offspring (F1) fed either a HFD or a nutritionally matched CD. Regardless of paternal diet, HFD fed male offspring had greater total body weight and adiposity. Offspring sired by a HFD male and fed a HFD were the heaviest, had the greatest adiposity and had the greatest concentration of serum cholesterol, triglyceride, HDL, and NEFA compared with CD sired/fed littermates. A synergistic increase in serum insulin was unmasked by both father/son HFD consumption, concomitant with increased sera glucose. Either a paternal or offspring HFD was associated with similar reductions to offspring sperm motility. Whereas sperm ROS concentrations and sperm–oocyte binding saw detrimental effects of both F0 HFD and F1 HFD with an interaction evident between both, culminating in the most impaired sperm parameters in this group. This indicates that metabolic and fertility disturbances in male offspring sired by HFD fathers are exacerbated by a “second-hit” of exposure to the same obesogenic environment postnatally. If translatable to human health, this suggests that adverse reproductive and metabolic outcomes may be amplified across generations through a shared calorie dense diet, relevant to the current worldwide obesity epidemic.
机译:摘要肥胖症和相关合并症在全球范围内越来越普遍。孕前小鼠的父亲暴露于高脂饮食(HFD)会损害雄性后代的代谢和生殖健康,尽管他们食用对照饮食(CD)。但是,后代与父母分享生活方式,包括饮食。我们评估了HFD父亲的雄性后代是否对HFD引起的代谢和生殖紊乱有更高的敏感性。这个2×2设计看到了创始人雄性(F0)及其后代(F1)喂养了HFD或营养匹配的CD。不论父本饮食如何,HFD喂养的雄性后代的总体重和肥胖都更大。与CD饲养/饲喂的同窝仔猪相比,由HFD饲养的雄性和饲喂HFD的后代最重,脂肪最大,血清胆固醇,甘油三酸酯,HDL和NEFA的浓度最高。父亲/儿子的HFD摄入量并未掩盖血清胰岛素的协同增加,同时血清葡萄糖增加。父系或后代HFD与后代精子运动性降低相似。而F0 HFD和F1 HFD的精子ROS浓度和精子-卵母细胞结合均具有有害作用,并且两者之间存在明显的相互作用,最终导致该组精子参数最受损。这表明,出生后暴露于相同的致肥胖环境中的“二次打击”加剧了HFD父亲陪伴的雄性后代的代谢和生育能力障碍。如果可以转化为人类健康,这表明不良的生殖和代谢结果可能会通过与当前全球肥胖病流行有关的共享卡路里密集饮食在几代人中放大。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号