Exposure to gestational diabetes mellitus in utero impacts hippocampal functional connectivity in response to food cues in children

Author:

Kullmann Stephanie1ORCID,Zhao SixiuORCID,Semeia LorenzoORCID,Veit Ralf2ORCID,Luo Shan3,Angelo Brendan4ORCID,Chow Ting5,Birkenfeld Andreas6ORCID,Preissl Hubert7ORCID,Xiang Anny5,Page Kathleen

Affiliation:

1. University of Tuebingen

2. University of Tubingen

3. USC

4. Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California

5. Kaiser Permanente Southern California

6. Universitätsklinikum Tübingen

7. University of Tübingen/Helmholtz Center Munich

Abstract

Abstract

Objectives Intrauterine exposure to gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) increases the risk of obesity in the offspring, but little is known about the underlying neural mechanisms. The hippocampus is crucial for food intake regulation and is vulnerable to the effects of obesity. The purpose of the study was to investigate whether GDM exposure affects hippocampal functional connectivity during exposure to food cues using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Methods Participants were 90 children age 7–11 years (53 females) who underwent an fMRI-based visual food cue task in the fasted state. Hippocampal functional connectivity (FC) was examined using generalized psychophysiological interaction in response to high-calorie food versus non-food cues. Food-cue induced hippocampal FC was compared between children with and without GDM exposure, while controlling for possible confounding effects of age, sex and waist-to-hip ratio. Results Children with GDM exposure exhibited stronger hippocampal FC to the insula and striatum (i.e., putamen, pallidum and nucleus accumbens) compared to unexposed children, while viewing high caloric food cues. Conclusions Intrauterine exposure to GDM was associated with higher food-cue induced hippocampal FC to reward processing regions. Future studies with longitudinal measurements are needed to clarify whether increased hippocampal FC to reward processing regions may raise the risk of the development of metabolic diseases later in life.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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