[HTML][HTML] Maternal diet–induced microRNAs and mTOR underlie β cell dysfunction in offspring

EU Alejandro, B Gregg, T Wallen… - The Journal of …, 2014 - Am Soc Clin Investig
EU Alejandro, B Gregg, T Wallen, D Kumusoglu, D Meister, A Chen, MJ Merrins, LS Satin…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2014Am Soc Clin Investig
A maternal diet that is low in protein increases the susceptibility of offspring to type 2
diabetes by inducing long-term alterations in β cell mass and function. Nutrients and growth
factor signaling converge through mTOR, suggesting that this pathway participates in β cell
programming during fetal development. Here, we revealed that newborns of dams exposed
to low-protein diet (LP0. 5) throughout pregnancy exhibited decreased insulin levels, a lower
β cell fraction, and reduced mTOR signaling. Adult offspring of LP0. 5-exposed mothers …
A maternal diet that is low in protein increases the susceptibility of offspring to type 2 diabetes by inducing long-term alterations in β cell mass and function. Nutrients and growth factor signaling converge through mTOR, suggesting that this pathway participates in β cell programming during fetal development. Here, we revealed that newborns of dams exposed to low-protein diet (LP0.5) throughout pregnancy exhibited decreased insulin levels, a lower β cell fraction, and reduced mTOR signaling. Adult offspring of LP0.5-exposed mothers exhibited glucose intolerance as a result of an insulin secretory defect and not β cell mass reduction. The β cell insulin secretory defect was distal to glucose-dependent Ca2+ influx and resulted from reduced proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin content. Islets from offspring of LP0.5-fed dams exhibited reduced mTOR and increased expression of a subset of microRNAs, and blockade of microRNA-199a-3p and -342 in these islets restored mTOR and insulin secretion to normal. Finally, transient β cell activation of mTORC1 signaling in offspring during the last week of pregnancy of mothers fed a LP0.5 rescued the defect in the neonatal β cell fraction and metabolic abnormalities in the adult. Together, these findings indicate that a maternal low-protein diet alters microRNA and mTOR expression in the offspring, influencing insulin secretion and glucose homeostasis.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation