2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052791
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Metabolic Induction and Early Responses of Mouse Blastocyst Developmental Programming following Maternal Low Protein Diet Affecting Life-Long Health

Abstract: Previously, we have shown that a maternal low protein diet, fed exclusively during the preimplantation period of mouse development (Emb-LPD), is sufficient to induce by the blastocyst stage a compensatory growth phenotype in late gestation and postnatally, correlating with increased risk of adult onset cardiovascular disease and behavioural dysfunction. Here, we examine mechanisms of induction of maternal Emb-LPD programming and early compensatory responses by the embryo. Emb-LPD induced changes in maternal se… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(125 citation statements)
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“…Intrauterine leucine availability is one of the key factors that may affect the predisposition to diseases in adulthood caused by maternal low-protein diet, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and for cardiovascular diseases (Langley et al 1994, Langley-Evans et al 1996, Heywood et al 2004, Eckert et al 2012. We show that an altered maternal nutritional environment is associated with increased embryonic mTORC1 signalling.…”
Section: Enhanced Mtorc1 Signalling In Diabetic Pregnancymentioning
confidence: 70%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Intrauterine leucine availability is one of the key factors that may affect the predisposition to diseases in adulthood caused by maternal low-protein diet, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and for cardiovascular diseases (Langley et al 1994, Langley-Evans et al 1996, Heywood et al 2004, Eckert et al 2012. We show that an altered maternal nutritional environment is associated with increased embryonic mTORC1 signalling.…”
Section: Enhanced Mtorc1 Signalling In Diabetic Pregnancymentioning
confidence: 70%
“…In the mouse, a disruption of the Mtor gene resulted in early embryo lethality (E 5.5) (Gangloff et al 2004). A maternal low-protein diet in mice led to decreased amino acid levels combined with reduced embryonic mTORC1 signalling (E 3.5) (Eckert et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…fetal growth (Yang et al 2003). Reduced mTORC1 activity was reported in F1 mouse blastocysts from mothers subjected to maternal undernutrition (0-4.25 days) during pregnancy (Eckert et al 2012). As gene expression analysis was performed on blastocysts retrieved from F1 growth-restricted females, this clearly highlights preexisting (epi)genetic alterations that could affect blastocyst metabolism.…”
Section: Accelerated Growth In F2 Blastocystsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…During its passage through the female reproductive tract, the embryo is involved in a highly complex interaction with its environment that includes specifi c signalling [65] and metabolic equilibrium [66,67]. It is obvious that the laboratory conditions used during ART only very imperfectly mimic the conditions of maternal reproductive tract.…”
Section: Role Of Epigenetic Mechanisms In Art-induced Alteration Of Tmentioning
confidence: 99%