Looking at the Future Through the Mother’s Womb: Gestational Diabetes and Offspring Fertility

Author:

Sinha Niharika12,Lydia Walker Gretchen12,Sen Aritro12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Reproductive and Developmental Sciences Program, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA

2. Department of Animal Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA

Abstract

Abstract Altered nutrition or intrauterine exposure to various adverse conditions during fetal development or earlier in a mother’s life can lead to epigenetic changes in fetal tissues, predisposing those tissues to diseases that manifest when offspring become adults. An example is a maternal obesity associated with gestational diabetes (GDM), where fetal exposure to a hyperglycemic, hyperinsulinemic, and/or hyperlipidemic gestational environment can provoke epigenetic changes that predispose offspring to various diseased conditions later in life. While it is now well established that offspring exposed to GDM have an increased risk of developing obesity, metabolic disorders, and/or cardiovascular disease in adult life, there are limited studies assessing the reproductive health of these offspring. This mini-review discusses the long-term effect of in utero exposure to GDM-associated adverse prenatal environment on the reproductive health of the offspring. Moreover, using evidence from various animal models and human epidemiological studies, this review offers molecular insight and understanding of how epigenetic reprogramming of genes culminates in reproductive dysfunction and the development of subfertility or infertility later in adult life.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

U.S. Department of Agriculture

AgBioResearch, Michigan State University

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology

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