Intestinal permeability and peripheral immune cell composition are altered by pregnancy and adiposity at mid- and late-gestation in the mouse

Author:

Ribeiro Tatiane A.ORCID,Breznik Jessica A.,Kennedy Katherine M.ORCID,Yeo Erica,Kennelly Brianna K. E.,Jazwiec Patrycja A.,Patterson Violet S.,Bellissimo Christian J.,Anhê Fernando F.,Schertzer Jonathan D.,Bowdish Dawn M. E.,Sloboda Deborah M.ORCID

Abstract

It is clear that the gastrointestinal tract influences metabolism and immune function. Most studies to date have used male test subjects, with a focus on effects of obesity and dietary challenges. Despite significant physiological maternal adaptations that occur across gestation, relatively few studies have examined pregnancy-related gut function. Moreover, it remains unknown how pregnancy and diet can interact to alter intestinal barrier function. In this study, we investigated the impacts of pregnancy and adiposity on maternal intestinal epithelium morphology, in vivo intestinal permeability, and peripheral blood immunophenotype, using control (CTL) and high-fat (HF) fed non-pregnant female mice and pregnant mice at mid- (embryonic day (E)14.5) and late (E18.5) gestation. We found that small intestine length increased between non-pregnant mice and dams at late-gestation, but ileum villus length, and ileum and colon crypt depths and goblet cell numbers remained similar. Compared to CTL-fed mice, HF-fed mice had reduced small intestine length, ileum crypt depth and villus length. Goblet cell numbers were only consistently reduced in HF-fed non-pregnant mice. Pregnancy increased in vivo gut permeability, with a greater effect at mid- versus late-gestation. Non-pregnant HF-fed mice had greater gut permeability, and permeability was also increased in HF-fed pregnant dams at mid but not late-gestation. The impaired maternal gut barrier in HF-fed dams at mid-gestation coincided with changes in maternal blood and bone marrow immune cell composition, including an expansion of circulating inflammatory Ly6Chigh monocytes. In summary, pregnancy has temporal effects on maternal intestinal structure and barrier function, and on peripheral immunophenotype, which are further modified by HF diet-induced maternal adiposity. Maternal adaptations in pregnancy are thus vulnerable to excess maternal adiposity, which may both affect maternal and child health.

Funder

Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Award

McMaster Institute for Research on Aging, McMaster University

Queen Elizabeth II Scholarship in Science and Technology

Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research, McMaster University

Canada Research Chair in Metabolic Inflammation

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Farncombe Digestive Health Research Institute Student Fellowship

CIHR Canada Graduate Scholarships – Master’s (CGS-M) award

CIHR Canada Graduate Scholarships – Doctoral (CGS-D) award

Thomas Neilson Scholarship, Fred & Helen Knight Enrichment Award

Ontario Graduate Scholarship

CIHR Fellowship

Canada Research Chair in Aging and Immunity

Canada Research Chair in Perinatal Programming

Canadian Institute of Health Research

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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