Developmental programming of obesity in mammals
Paul D. Taylor,Lucilla Poston +1 more
TL;DR: The perinatal environment, which appears to programme subsequent obesity, provides a potential therapeutic target, and work in this field will readily translate into improved interventional strategies to stem the growing epidemic of obesity.
read more
Abstract: Converging lines of evidence from epidemiological studies and animal models now indicate that the origins of obesity and related metabolic disorders lie not only in the interaction between genes and traditional adult risk factors, such as unbalanced diet and physical inactivity, but also in the interplay between genes and the embryonic, fetal and early postnatal environment. Whilst studies in man initially focused on the relationship between low birth weight and risk of adult obesity and metabolic syndrome, evidence is also growing to suggest that increased birth weight and/or adiposity at birth can also lead to increased risk for childhood and adult obesity. Hence, there appears to be increased risk of obesity at both ends of the birth weight spectrum. Animal models, including both under- and overnutrition in pregnancy and lactation lend increasing support to the developmental origins of obesity. This review focuses upon the influence of the maternal nutritional and hormonal environment in pregnancy in permanently programming appetite and energy expenditure and the hormonal, neuronal and autocrine mechanisms that contribute to the maintenance of energy balance in the offspring. We discuss the potential maternal programming 'vectors' and the molecular mechanisms that may lead to persistent pathophysiological changes resulting in subsequent disease. The perinatal environment, which appears to programme subsequent obesity, provides a potential therapeutic target, and work in this field will readily translate into improved interventional strategies to stem the growing epidemic of obesity, a disease which, once manifest, has proven particularly resistant to treatment.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Eating behaviour and weight in children
TL;DR: The results support the idea that approach-related and avoidance-related appetitive traits are systematically (and oppositely) related to adiposity, and not exclusively associated with obesity, and could be used as indicators of susceptibility to weight gain.
454
Developmental and epigenetic pathways to obesity: an evolutionary-developmental perspective
Peter D. Gluckman,Mark A. Hanson +1 more
TL;DR: Although variation in individual lifestyle and genotype are important factors in explaining individual variation in the risk of developing obesity in an obesogenic environment, there is growing evidence that developmentally plastic processes also contribute.
354
Prenatal Exposure to the Environmental Obesogen Tributyltin Predisposes Multipotent Stem Cells to Become Adipocytes
TL;DR: It is shown that TBT sensitizes human and mouse multipotent stromal stem cells derived from white adipose tissue to undergo adipogenesis, an effect that could likely increase adipose mass over time.
Maternal perinatal undernutrition drastically reduces postnatal leptin surge and affects the development of arcuate nucleus proopiomelanocortin neurons in neonatal male rat pups.
Fabien Delahaye,Christophe Breton,Pierre Yves Risold,Mihaela Enache,Isabelle Dutriez-Casteloot,Christine Laborie,Jean Lesage,Didier Vieau +7 more
TL;DR: The data showed that maternal undernutrition drastically reduces the postnatal surge of plasma leptin, disturbing particularly the hypothalamic wiring as well as the gene expression of the anorexigenic POMC neurons in male rat pups, which might contribute to the adult metabolic disorders resulting from perinatal growth retardation.
The risk of maternal obesity to the long-term health of the offspring.
TL;DR: This review will examine the emerging evidence from human studies linking maternal obesity to adverse offspring outcomes and the complex relationships between the maternal metabolic milieu and the developing foetus.
277
References
Infant mortality, childhood nutrition, and ischaemic heart disease in England and Wales.
David J.P. Barker,Clive Osmond +1 more
TL;DR: Although the rise in ischaemic heart disease in England and Wales has been associated with increasing prosperity, mortality rates are highest in the least affluent areas.
2.8K
The thrifty phenotype hypothesis.
C. N. Hales,David J.P. Barker +1 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that the epidemiological associations between poor fetal and infant growth and the subsequent development of type 2 diabetes and the metabolic syndrome result from the effects of poor nutrition in early life, which produces permanent changes in glucose-insulin metabolism.
Fetal nutrition and cardiovascular disease in adult life
David J.P. Barker,Peter D. Gluckman,Keith M. Godfrey,Jane E. Harding,Julie A. Owens,J. S. Robinson +5 more
TL;DR: This paper shows how fetal undernutrition at different stages of gestation can be linked to these patterns of early growth in babies who are small at birth or during infancy.
2.8K
Metabolic Syndrome in Childhood: Association With Birth Weight, Maternal Obesity, and Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
TL;DR: Analysis of insulin resistance at 11 years in a multivariate logistic regression revealed that childhood obesity and the combination of LGA status and maternal GDM were associated with insulin resistance, with odds ratios of 4.3 and 4.4 (95% CI: 1.5–74.4), respectively.
2.4K
Fetal and placental size and risk of hypertension in adult life.
TL;DR: For the first time, the intrauterine environment has an important effect on blood pressure and hypertension in adults and the highest blood pressures occurred in men and women who had been small babies with large placentas.
1.7K