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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Maternal high-fat diet programs offspring airway hyperinnervation and hyperresponsiveness.

Journal:
JCI insight
Year:
2025
Authors:
Williams, Kayla R et al.
Species:
rodent

Abstract

The impact of diet-induced maternal obesity on offspring airway hyperresponsiveness was studied in a diversity outbred mouse model that mirrors human genetic diversity. Female mice were started on high-fat or regular diet 8 weeks before breeding and throughout pregnancy and lactation. After weaning, all offspring were fed a regular diet. By 12 weeks, body weight and fat were increased in offspring of high-fat diet-fed dams, which was accompanied by metabolic dysfunction and hyperinsulinemia. This was followed by increased epithelial sensory innervation and increased bronchoconstriction to inhaled 5-hydroxytryptamine at 16 weeks. Bronchoconstriction was nerve mediated and blocked by vagotomy or atropine. A high-fat diet before pregnancy exerted the most influence on offspring airway physiology. Maternal obesity induced metabolic dysfunction and hyperinsulinemia, resulting in hyperinnervation and subsequent increased reflex-mediated hyperresponsiveness in their offspring. This is relevant to our understanding of asthma inheritance, considering the genetic diversity of humans.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39782687/