City
Epaper

Researchers suggest how obesity during pregnancy impact offspring's liver, skeletal muscle metabolism

By ANI | Updated: November 25, 2022 23:50 IST

Young nonhuman monkeys on normal diets whose moms were fat during pregnancy had metabolic disturbances in the liver and ...

Open in App

Young nonhuman monkeys on normal diets whose moms were fat during pregnancy had metabolic disturbances in the liver and skeletal muscle, according to research.

The findings of the recent study published in The FASEB Journal.

For the study, tissue biopsies were obtained from 19 post-pubertal offspring of mothers who were fed a Western diet and were obese during pregnancy, and from 13 control animals born to non-obese mothers fed a standard diet. All offspring ate a healthy chow diet after weaning.

Investigators identified 58 metabolites significantly altered in liver and 46 in skeletal muscle of the offspring of mothers with obesity during pregnancy, with 8 metabolites shared between both tissues. Several metabolic pathways were identified from these dysregulated metabolites. These differences in metabolites were not seen in blood samples taken from the animals.

"This study is exciting for two reasons: First it shows that exposure to an unhealthy environment in utero has long-term health consequences, and different organs and tissues are affected in different ways." said corresponding author Michael Olivier, PhD, of Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

"Second, our analysis suggests you cannot just analyze blood samples to understand what is happening in the liver or muscle."

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: The FASEB JournalWake forest university school of medicineMichael olivier
Open in App

Related Stories

HealthLess-invasive cardiac MRI helps in early evaluation of patients

HealthDiabetes incidence rates continue to increase in children, young adults: Study

HealthDiabetes incidence rates continue to increase in children, young adults: Study

HealthStudy finds diabetes incidence rates continue to increase in children, young adults

TechnologyStudy: High blood pressure during pregnancy associated with thinking issues later in life

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPilot plant of fortified rice kernels launched at CSIR-NIIST

TechnologyAIIMS Bhubaneswar launches Robotic Knee Replacement facility

TechnologyQuantum computing to revolutionise innovation and scientific discovery: Jyotiraditya Scindia

TechnologyStudy links antibiotic exposure before age two to childhood obesity

TechnologyBoult Audio’s net profit declines by 37 pc in FY24, revenue up 41 pc