PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Maternal obesity caused by overnutrition exposure leads to reversal learning deficits and striatal disturbance in rats.

  • Ting Wu,
  • Shining Deng,
  • Wei-Guang Li,
  • Yongguo Yu,
  • Fei Li,
  • Meng Mao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e78876

Abstract

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Maternal obesity caused by overnutrition during pregnancy increases susceptibility to metabolic risks in adulthood, such as obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes; however, whether and how it affects the cognitive system associated with the brain remains elusive. Here, we report that pregnant obesity induced by exposure to excessive high fatty or highly palatable food specifically impaired reversal learning, a kind of adaptive behavior, while leaving serum metabolic metrics intact in the offspring of rats, suggesting a much earlier functional and structural defects possibly occurred in the central nervous system than in the metabolic system in the offspring born in unfavorable intrauterine nutritional environment. Mechanically, we found that above mentioned cognitive inflexibility might be associated with significant striatal disturbance including impaired dopamine homeostasis and disrupted leptin signaling in the adult offspring. These collective data add a novel perspective of understanding the adverse postnatal sequelae in central nervous system induced by developmental programming and the related molecular mechanism through which priming of risk for developmental disorders may occur during early life.