Maternal obesity and offspring health: Adapting metabolic changes through autophagy and mitophagy

Author:

Wang Litao12ORCID,O'Kane Aislinn M.3ORCID,Zhang Yingmei12,Ren Jun12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Shanghai Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, Zhongshan Hospital Fudan University Shanghai 200032 China

2. National Clinical Research Center for Interventional Medicine Shanghai 200032 China

3. Department of Clinical Pharmacology Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis Indiana 46202 USA

Abstract

SummaryMaternal obesity leads to obstetric complications and a high prevalence of metabolic anomalies in the offspring. Among various contributing factors for maternal obesity‐evoked health sequelae, developmental programming is considered as one of the leading culprit factors for maternal obesity‐associated chronic comorbidities. Although a unified theory is still lacking to systematically address multiple unfavorable postnatal health sequelae, a cadre of etiological machineries have been put forward, including lipotoxicity, inflammation, oxidative stress, autophagy/mitophagy defect, and cell death. Hereinto, autophagy and mitophagy play an essential housekeeping role in the clearance of long‐lived, damaged, and unnecessary cell components to maintain and restore cellular homeostasis. Defective autophagy/mitophagy has been reported in maternal obesity and negatively impacts fetal development and postnatal health. This review will provide an update on metabolic disorders in fetal development and postnatal health issues evoked by maternal obesity and/or intrauterine overnutrition and discuss the possible contribution of autophagy/mitophagy in metabolic diseases. Moreover, relevant mechanisms and potential therapeutic strategies will be discussed in an effort to target autophagy/mitophagy and metabolic disturbances in maternal obesity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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