Postnatal persistence of nonhuman primate sex-dependent renal structural and molecular changes programmed by intrauterine growth restriction

非人类灵长类动物出生后持续存在性别依赖性的肾脏结构和分子变化,这是由宫内生长受限引起的

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作者:Andrew C Bishop, Kimberly D Spradling-Reeves, Robert E Shade, Kenneth J Lange, Shifra Birnbaum, Kristin Favela, Edward J Dick Jr, Mark J Nijland, Cun Li, Peter W Nathanielsz, Laura A Cox

Background

Poor nutrition during fetal development programs postnatal kidney function. Understanding postnatal consequences in nonhuman primates (NHP) is important for translation to our understanding the impact on human kidney function and disease risk. We hypothesized that intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) in NHP persists postnatally, with potential molecular mechanisms revealed by Western-type diet challenge.

Conclusion

Fetal undernutrition impacts juvenile offspring kidneys at the molecular level suggesting early-onset blood pressure dysregulation.

Methods

IUGR juvenile baboons were fed a 7-week Western diet, with kidney biopsies, blood, and urine collected before and after challenge. Transcriptomics and metabolomics were used to analyze biosamples.

Results

Pre-challenge IUGR kidney transcriptome and urine metabolome differed from controls. Post-challenge, sex and diet-specific responses in urine metabolite and renal signaling pathways were observed. Dysregulated mTOR signaling persisted postnatally in female pre-challenge. Post-challenge IUGR male response showed uncoordinated signaling suggesting proximal tubule injury.

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