Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring

Latest epidemiological data suggests 1.5 billion adults worldwide are either overweight or obese. With increasing weight and obesity, adipocytes increase in size. The enlargement of adipocytes has been associated with low grade chronic inflammation via elevated adipokine secretion. Previous epidemio...

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Main Author: Patel, Nikhil
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13958/
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author Patel, Nikhil
author_facet Patel, Nikhil
author_sort Patel, Nikhil
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Latest epidemiological data suggests 1.5 billion adults worldwide are either overweight or obese. With increasing weight and obesity, adipocytes increase in size. The enlargement of adipocytes has been associated with low grade chronic inflammation via elevated adipokine secretion. Previous epidemiological studies in humans and experimental studies in animals have shown that during different periods of pregnancy (gestation) the offspring that are born to maternal nutritional manipulation are more susceptible to developing metabolic diseases in later adult life. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the role of maternal nutritional manipulation on adipose tissue depots and in particular the consequences the effect on markers of adipokine secretion. Studies were conducted on both large and small animals (i.e. sheep and rats). Sheep studies focused on mid to late and late gestation periods of maternal nutritional restriction. Rat studies concentrated on long term fructose feeding during pregnancy and its effect on both the mother and offspring. Gene expression analysis identified an up-regulation in inflammatory related genes in pericardial and subcutaneous adipose tissue in the sheep studies. This was also seen in the rat studies with protein and gene expression displaying an up-regulation of inflammatory and metabolic related genes and proteins. The main conclusion of my thesis is that after following maternal nutrient restriction, females appear to be much more sensitive to inflammatory and metabolic adaptations compared to males, possibly due to sex hormones playing a role. Whilst fructose feeding during pregnancy concluded the possibility of homeorhesis playing a protective role against potentially detrimental inflammatory pathways being activated in the mothers, the offspring however displayed signs of low level chronic inflammation in the retroperitoneal depot from early infancy to later adult life.
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spelling nottingham-139582025-02-28T11:27:58Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13958/ Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring Patel, Nikhil Latest epidemiological data suggests 1.5 billion adults worldwide are either overweight or obese. With increasing weight and obesity, adipocytes increase in size. The enlargement of adipocytes has been associated with low grade chronic inflammation via elevated adipokine secretion. Previous epidemiological studies in humans and experimental studies in animals have shown that during different periods of pregnancy (gestation) the offspring that are born to maternal nutritional manipulation are more susceptible to developing metabolic diseases in later adult life. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the role of maternal nutritional manipulation on adipose tissue depots and in particular the consequences the effect on markers of adipokine secretion. Studies were conducted on both large and small animals (i.e. sheep and rats). Sheep studies focused on mid to late and late gestation periods of maternal nutritional restriction. Rat studies concentrated on long term fructose feeding during pregnancy and its effect on both the mother and offspring. Gene expression analysis identified an up-regulation in inflammatory related genes in pericardial and subcutaneous adipose tissue in the sheep studies. This was also seen in the rat studies with protein and gene expression displaying an up-regulation of inflammatory and metabolic related genes and proteins. The main conclusion of my thesis is that after following maternal nutrient restriction, females appear to be much more sensitive to inflammatory and metabolic adaptations compared to males, possibly due to sex hormones playing a role. Whilst fructose feeding during pregnancy concluded the possibility of homeorhesis playing a protective role against potentially detrimental inflammatory pathways being activated in the mothers, the offspring however displayed signs of low level chronic inflammation in the retroperitoneal depot from early infancy to later adult life. 2014-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13958/1/Nikhil_Patel_PhD_Print_Version.pdf Patel, Nikhil (2014) Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Metabolic diseases Adipose tissue Maternal nutrition in sheep Maternal nutrition in rats Adipokine secretion
spellingShingle Metabolic diseases
Adipose tissue
Maternal nutrition in sheep
Maternal nutrition in rats
Adipokine secretion
Patel, Nikhil
Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title_full Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title_fullStr Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title_full_unstemmed Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title_short Nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
title_sort nutrition manipulation during development and its impact of metabolic homeostasis in the adult offspring
topic Metabolic diseases
Adipose tissue
Maternal nutrition in sheep
Maternal nutrition in rats
Adipokine secretion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13958/