Combined parental obesity augments single-parent obesity effects on hypothalamus inflammation, leptin signaling (JAK/STAT), hyperphagia, and obesity in the adult …

F Ornellas, V Souza-Mello… - Physiology & …, 2016 - Elsevier
Physiology & Behavior, 2016Elsevier
We aimed to evaluate the effects of maternal and/or paternal obesity on offspring body mass,
leptin signaling, appetite-regulating neurotransmitters and local inflammatory markers.
C57BL/6 mice received standard chow (SC, lean groups) or high-fat diet (HF, obese groups)
starting from one month of age. At three months, HF mice became obese relative to SC mice.
They were then mated as follows: lean mother and lean father, lean mother and obese
father, obese mother and lean father, and obese mother and obese father. The offspring …
Abstract
We aimed to evaluate the effects of maternal and/or paternal obesity on offspring body mass, leptin signaling, appetite-regulating neurotransmitters and local inflammatory markers. C57BL/6 mice received standard chow (SC, lean groups) or high-fat diet (HF, obese groups) starting from one month of age. At three months, HF mice became obese relative to SC mice. They were then mated as follows: lean mother and lean father, lean mother and obese father, obese mother and lean father, and obese mother and obese father. The offspring received the SC diet from weaning until three months of age, when they were sacrificed. In the offspring, paternal obesity did not lead to changes in the Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activation of the transcription (STAT) pathway or feeding behavior but did induce hypothalamic inflammation. On the other hand, maternal obesity resulted in increased weight gain, hyperleptinemia, decreased leptin OBRb receptor expression, JAK/STAT pathway impairment, and increased SOCS3 signaling in the offspring. In addition, maternal obesity elevated inflammatory markers and altered NPY and POMC expression in the hypothalamus. Interestingly, combined parental obesity exacerbated the deleterious outcomes compared to single-parent obesity. In conclusion, while maternal obesity is known to program metabolic changes and obesity in offspring, the current study demonstrated that obese fathers induce hypothalamus inflammation in offspring, which may contribute to the development of metabolic syndromes in adulthood.
Elsevier