Maternal High Fat Diet Programs Male Mice Offspring Hyperphagia and Obesity: Mechanism of Increased Appetite Neurons via Altered Neurogenic Factors and Nutrient Sensor AMPK
- PMID: 33138074
- PMCID: PMC7693487
- DOI: 10.3390/nu12113326
Maternal High Fat Diet Programs Male Mice Offspring Hyperphagia and Obesity: Mechanism of Increased Appetite Neurons via Altered Neurogenic Factors and Nutrient Sensor AMPK
Abstract
Maternal high-fat (HF) is associated with offspring hyperphagia and obesity. We hypothesized that maternal HF alters fetal neuroprogenitor cell (NPC) and hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) development with preferential differentiation of neurons towards orexigenic (NPY/AgRP) versus anorexigenic (POMC) neurons, leading to offspring hyperphagia and obesity. Furthermore, these changes may involve hypothalamic bHLH neuroregulatory factors (Hes1, Mash1, Ngn3) and energy sensor AMPK. Female mice were fed either a control or a high fat (HF) diet prior to mating, and during pregnancy and lactation. HF male newborns were heavier at birth and exhibited decreased protein expression of hypothalamic bHLH factors, pAMPK/AMPK and POMC with increased AgRP. As adults, these changes persisted though with increased ARC pAMPK/AMPK. Importantly, the total NPY neurons were increased, which was consistent with the increased food intake and adult fat mass. Further, NPCs from HF newborn hypothalamic tissue showed similar changes with preferential NPC neuronal differentiation towards NPY. Lastly, the role of AMPK was further confirmed with in vitro treatment of Control NPCs with pharmacologic AMPK modulators. Thus, the altered ARC development of HF offspring results in excess appetite and reduced satiety leading to obesity. The underlying mechanism may involve AMPK/bHLH pathways.
Keywords: AMPK activator; developmental programming; hypothalamic arcuate nucleus; neuropeptides; neuroprogenitor cells.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors report no conflicts of interest.
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