Abstract
AbstractIf sufficient nutrition is not obtained during pregnancy, the fetus changes its endocrine system and metabolism to protect the brain, resulting in a loss of body size. The detailed mechanisms that determine the success or failure of growth catch-up are still unknown. Therefore, we investigated the mechanism by which catch-up growth failure occurs. The body weights of rat pups at birth from dams whose calorie intake during pregnancy was reduced by 40% were significantly lower than those of controls, and some offspring failed to catch up. Short-body-length and low-bodyweight rats showed blood IGF-1 levels and mRNA expression levels of IGF-1 and growth hormone receptor (GHR) in the liver that were lower than those in controls. The next generation offspring from low-bodyweight non-catch-up (LBW-NCG) rats had high expression of miR-322 and low expression of GHR and IGF-1. The expression of miR-322 showed a significant negative correlation with GHR expression and body length, and overexpression of miR-322 suppressed GHR expression. We found that insufficient intake of calories during pregnancy causes catch-up growth failure due to increased expression of miR-322 and decreased expression of GHR in the livers of offspring, and this effect is inherited by the next generation.
Funder
MEXT | Japan Science and Technology Agency
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
12 articles.
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