Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology & East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute East Carolina University Greenville North Carolina USA
2. Department of Molecular Medicine University of South Florida Tampa Florida USA
3. Department of Biostatistics, College of Allied Health Sciences East Carolina University Greenville North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractSeveral lines of evidence indicate that ancestral diet might play an important role in determining offspring's metabolic traits. However, it is not yet clear whether ancestral diet can affect offspring's food choices and feeding behavior. In the current study, taking advantage of Drosophila model system, we demonstrate that paternal Western diet (WD) increases offspring food consumption up to the fourth generation. Paternal WD also induced alterations in F1 offspring brain proteome. Using enrichment analyses of pathways for upregulated and downregulated proteins, we found that upregulated proteins had significant enrichments in terms related to translation and translation factors, whereas downregulated proteins displayed enrichments in small molecule metabolic processes, TCA cycles, and electron transport chain (ETC). Using MIENTURNET miRNA prediction tool, dme‐miR‐10‐3p was identified as the top conserved miRNA predicted to target proteins regulated by ancestral diet. RNAi‐based knockdown of miR‐10 in the brain significantly increased food consumption, implicating miR‐10 as a potential factor in programming feeding behavior. Together, these findings suggest that ancestral nutrition may influence offspring feeding behavior through alterations in miRNAs.
Funder
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Biotechnology
Cited by
2 articles.
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