Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2019)

Maternal High Fat Diet and in-Utero Metformin Exposure Significantly Impact upon the Fetal Renal Proteome of Male Mice

  • Eva Nüsken,
  • Eva-Maria Turnwald,
  • Gregor Fink,
  • Jenny Voggel,
  • Christopher Yosy,
  • Tobias Kretschmer,
  • Marion Handwerk,
  • Maria Wohlfarth,
  • Lutz T. Weber,
  • Eva Hucklenbruch-Rother,
  • Jörg Dötsch,
  • Kai-Dietrich Nüsken,
  • Sarah Appel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8050663
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. 663

Abstract

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There is accumulating evidence for fetal programming of later kidney disease by maternal obesity or associated conditions. We performed a hypothesis-generating study to identify potentially underlying mechanisms. Female mice were randomly split in two groups and fed either a standard diet (SD) or high fat diet (HFD) from weaning until mating and during pregnancy. Half of the dams from both groups were treated with metformin ((M), 380 mg/kg), resulting in four experimental groups (SD, SD-M, HFD, HFD-M). Caesarean section was performed on gestational day 18.5. Fetal kidney tissue was isolated from cryo-slices using laser microdissection methods and a proteomic screen was performed. For single proteins, a fold change ≥1.5 and q-value <0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. Interestingly, HFD versus SD had a larger effect on the proteome of fetal kidneys (56 proteins affected; interaction clusters shown for proteins concerning transcription/translation, mitochondrial processes, eicosanoid metabolism, H2S-synthesis and membrane remodeling) than metformin exposure in either SD (29 proteins affected; clusters shown for proteins involved in transcription/translation) or HFD (6 proteins affected; no cluster). By further analysis, ATP6V1G1, THY1, PRKCA and NDUFB3 were identified as the most promising candidates potentially mediating reprogramming effects of metformin in a maternal high fat diet.

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