The impact of maternal obesity on polycystic kidney disease progression in a mouse model.

Sarah J Miller, Kaitlyn Hill, Isabella Darby, Fariha Nusrat, Jacob E Friedman, Michael C Rudolph, Kurt A Zimmerman
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Abstract

Due to the growing obesity epidemic in the United States, it is now estimated that approximately one third of all children are born to obese moms. These data, coupled with data indicating that obesity is associated with accelerated cyst growth in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), led us to hypothesize that maternal obesity may influence the rate of disease progression in offspring. To test this hypothesis, we induced maternal obesity by high-fat diet (HFD) feeding in the orthologous Pkd1RC/RC mouse model of ADPKD and followed polycystic kidney disease (PKD) progression in offspring for up to 1 year. Surprisingly, and in contrast to our initial hypothesis, exposure to maternal obesity during pregnancy and lactation did not significantly impact PKD severity in offspring at 3 mo or 1 yr of age. In contrast, reexposure to HFD for ∼3 m beginning at 12 wk of age worsened PKD severity in female, but not male, offspring born to obese dams as measured by cystic index, cyst number, and cyst area. Despite worsened cystic parameters, fibrosis and blood urea nitrogen were not altered in these animals. Collectively, these findings indicate that maternal obesity may accelerate PKD severity in female offspring exposed to an obesogenic diet.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Due to the growing obesity pandemic, almost one third of all children are born to mothers with obesity; however, the impact of maternal obesity on polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is unknown. In this manuscript, we found that maternal obesity did not worsen PKD severity in Pkd1RC/RC mice at 3 mo or 1 yr of age when weaned onto normal chow diet. However, rechallenging pups born to obese mothers worsened PKD severity in female but not male mice.

母体肥胖对小鼠模型多囊肾进展的影响
由于肥胖在美国越来越流行,据估计,现在大约有三分之一的孩子是由肥胖的母亲所生。这些数据,再加上肥胖与常染色体显性多囊肾病(ADPKD)患者囊肿生长加速相关的数据,使我们假设母亲肥胖可能影响后代疾病进展的速度。为了验证这一假设,我们在同源Pkd1RC/RC ADPKD小鼠模型中通过高脂肪饮食(HFD)喂养诱导母体肥胖,并对后代多囊肾病(PKD)进展进行了长达一年的随访。令人惊讶的是,与我们最初的假设相反,在怀孕和哺乳期间暴露于母亲肥胖并没有显著影响3个月或1岁时后代的PKD严重程度。相比之下,从12周龄开始再次暴露于HFD约3个月,通过囊指数、囊肿数量和囊肿面积测量,肥胖母鼠所生后代的雌性PKD严重程度加重,而雄性没有。尽管囊性参数恶化,但这些动物的纤维化和BUN没有改变。总的来说,这些发现表明,母亲肥胖可能会加速暴露于致肥性饮食的雌性后代的PKD严重程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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