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8 July 2015 Maternal High-Fat Diet Causes a Sex-Dependent Increase in AGTR2 Expression and Cardiac Dysfunction in Adult Male Rat Offspring
Qin Xue, Pinxian Chen, Xiongxiong Li, Guiping Zhang, Andrew J. Patterson, Jiandong Luo
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Abstract

Maternal high-fat diet (HFD) is associated with cardiovascular disease later in life. This study tested the hypothesis that maternal HFD causes programming of increased cardiac angiotensin II receptor type 2 (AGTR2) expression, resulting in heightened cardiac susceptibility to ischemic injury in male offspring in a sex-dependent manner. Pregnant rats were divided between control and HFD (HFD-fed during gestation) groups. Maternal HFD resulted in cardiac hypertrophy in only male offspring, but had no effect on cardiac systolic and diastolic function in both male and female offspring. In addition, maternal HFD increased heart susceptibility to ischemia-reperfusion injury in adult male offspring, but not female offspring. There was an increase in Agtr2 mRNA and protein abundance in male, but not female offspring. However, maternal HFD had no effect on angiotensin II receptor type 1 (AGTR1) expression in both male and female offspring. HFD resulted in decreased glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) binding to the glucocorticoid response elements at the Agtr2 promoter, which was due to decreased GRs in the hearts of adult male offspring. Inhibition of AGTR2 with PD123319 abrogated maternal HFD-induced increase in cardiac ischemic vulnerability in male adult rats. The results demonstrate that maternal HFD causes programming of increased Agtr2 gene expression in the heart by downregulation of GR, contributing to the heightened cardiac vulnerability to ischemic injury in adult male offspring in a sex-dependent manner.

Qin Xue, Pinxian Chen, Xiongxiong Li, Guiping Zhang, Andrew J. Patterson, and Jiandong Luo "Maternal High-Fat Diet Causes a Sex-Dependent Increase in AGTR2 Expression and Cardiac Dysfunction in Adult Male Rat Offspring," Biology of Reproduction 93(2), (8 July 2015). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.115.129916
Received: 14 March 2015; Accepted: 1 June 2015; Published: 8 July 2015
KEYWORDS
angiotensin II receptors
fetal programming
glucocorticoid receptor
heart
maternal high-fat diet
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