Maternal Exercise-Induced SOD3 Reverses the Deleterious Effects of Maternal High-Fat Diet on Offspring Metabolism Through Stabilization of H3K4me3 and Protection Against WDR82 Carbonylation

Author:

Kusuyama Joji123ORCID,Makarewicz Nathan S.1,Albertson Brent G.1,Alves-Wagner Ana Barbara1,Conlin Royce H.1,Prince Noah B.1,Alves Christiano R.R.1,Ramachandran Krithika1,Kozuka Chisayo4ORCID,Xiudong Yang5,Xia Yang5,Hirshman Michael F.1,Hatta Toshihisa6,Nagatomi Ryoichi37,Nozik Eva S.8,Goodyear Laurie J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section on Integrative Physiology and Metabolism, Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

2. Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan

3. Division of Biomedical Engineering for Health and Welfare, Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan

4. YCI Laboratory for Metabolic Epigenetics, RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences, Yokohama, Japan

5. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas at Houston, Houston, TX

6. Department of Anatomy, Kanazawa Medical University, Kanazawa, Japan

7. Department of Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan

8. Cardiovascular Pulmonary Research Laboratories and Pediatric Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Center, Aurora, CO

Abstract

Preclinical studies reveal maternal exercise as a promising intervention to reduce the transmission of multigenerational metabolic dysfunction caused by maternal obesity. The benefits of maternal exercise on offspring health may arise from multiple factors and have recently been shown to involve DNA demethylation of critical hepatic genes leading to enhanced glucose metabolism in offspring. Histone modification is another epigenetic regulator, yet the effects of maternal obesity and exercise on histone methylation in offspring are not known. Here, we find that maternal high-fat diet (HFD; 60% kcal from fat) induced dysregulation of offspring liver glucose metabolism in C57BL/6 mice through a mechanism involving increased reactive oxygen species, WD repeat-containing 82 (WDR82) carbonylation, and inactivation of histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferase leading to decreased H3K4me3 at the promoters of glucose metabolic genes. Remarkably, the entire signal was restored if the HFD-fed dams had exercised during pregnancy. WDR82 overexpression in hepatoblasts mimicked the effects of maternal exercise on H3K4me3 levels. Placental superoxide dismutase 3 (SOD3), but not antioxidant treatment with N-acetylcysteine was necessary for the regulation of H3K4me3, gene expression, and glucose metabolism. Maternal exercise regulates a multicomponent epigenetic system in the fetal liver resulting in the transmission of the benefits of exercise to offspring.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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