Cumulative Metabolic and Epigenetic Effects of Paternal and/or Maternal Supplementation with Arachidonic Acid across Three Consecutive Generations in Mice — Carmen de la Rocha (2022) | RDL Network
Cumulative Metabolic and Epigenetic Effects of Paternal and/or Maternal Supplementation with Arachidonic Acid across Three Consecutive Generations in Mice
Article 2022 en
Authors
CR
Carmen de la Rocha
DR
Dalia Rodríguez‐Ríos
ER
Enrique Ramı́rez-Chávez
Abstract
1 min read
Apart from the known associations between arachidonic acid (AA), weight gain, and neurological and immune function, AA exposure leads to alterations in global and gene-specific DNA methylation (DNAm) and fatty acid (FA) content in human cultured cells. However, it is unknown as to whether the latter effects occur in vivo and are maintained over extended periods of time and across generations. To address this issue, we asked whether AA supplementation for three consecutive generations (prior to coitus in sires or in utero in dams) affected offspring growth phenotypes, in addition to liver DNAm and FA profiles in mice. Twelve-week-old BALB/c mice were exposed daily to AA dissolved in soybean oil (vehicle, VH), or VH only, for 10 days prior to mating or during the entire pregnancy (20 days). On average, 15 mice were supplemented per generation, followed by analysis of offspring body weight and liver traits (x average = 36 and 10 per generation, respectively). Body weight cumulatively increased in F2 and F3 offspring generations and positively correlated with milligrams of paternal or maternal offspring AA exposure. A concomitant increase in liver weight was observed. Notably, akin to AA-challenged cultured cells, global DNAm and cis-7-hexadecenoic acid (16:1n-9), an anti-inflammatory FA that is dependent on stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1) activity, increased with milligrams of AA exposure. In accordance, liver Scd1 promoter methylation decreased with milligrams of germline AA exposure and was negatively correlated with liver weight. Our results show that mice retain cellular memories of AA exposure across generations that could potentially be beneficial to the innate immune system.
Guillermo Antonio Silva-Martínez, Dalia Rodríguez‐Ríos, Yolanda Alvarado‐Caudillo, Alejandro Vaquero, Manel Esteller, F. Javier Carmona, Sebastián Morán, Finn Cilius Nielsen, Marie Lindholm, Katarzyna Wróbel, Kazimierz Wróbel, Gloria Barbosa‐Sabanero, Silvio Zaina, Gertrud Lund
Guillermo Antonio Silva-Martínez, Dalia Rodríguez‐Ríos, Yolanda Alvarado‐Caudillo, Alejandro Vaquero, Manel Esteller, F. Javier Carmona, Sebastián Morán, Finn Cilius Nielsen, Marie Wickström-Lindholmx, Katarzyna Wróbel, Kazimierz Wróbel, Gloria Barbosa‐Sabanero, Silvio Zaina, Gertrud Lund
Guillermo Antonio Silva-Martínez, Dalia Rodríguez‐Ríos, Yolanda Alvarado‐Caudillo, Alejandro Vaquero, Manel Esteller, F. Javier Carmona, Sebastián Morán, Finn Cilius Nielsen, Marie Lindholm, Katarzyna Wróbel, Kazimierz Wróbel, Gloria Barbosa‐Sabanero, Silvio Zaina, Gertrud Lund
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.