Intergenerational effects of prenatal ethanol on glucose tolerance and insulin response

Consequences of prenatal exposure to ethanol (E) include morphological, physiological, and cognitive deficits and are collectively classified as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. Adult prenatal E exposed offspring show insulin resistance, and given that in utero hyperglycemic environment can cause metabolic disorders in subsequent generations; we investigated the effects of grandmaternal E on functional glucose and insulin responses of the second generation. Sprague-Dawley (S) rat dams, mated with S males, received E-containing liquid diet and two different control diets between gestational days 8 and 20. Additionally, because prenatal E-induced behavioral deficits can be reversed by simultaneous thyroxine (T4) treatment, another group of dams received 0.3 mg/l T4 in their E diet. Their first-generation (F1) offspring were mated with control Brown Norway (B) males or females to produce SB and BS F2 progeny. Dams consuming E during pregnancy were hyperglycemic, and their F1 offspring showed insulin resistance in the glucose tolerance test (GTT). However, F2 responses to GTT varied based on the sex of prenatal E-exposed parent. BS F2 females, and both male and female SB F2 progeny, displayed hypoglycemic and hyperinsulinemic GTT response patterns. Although administering T4 to E dams normalized thyroid function of the F1 generation, it did not reverse their prenatal E-induced metabolic dysfunction. In contrast, administration of T4 to the alcohol-consuming grandmother reversed o...
Source: Physiological Genomics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: Call for Papers: Epigenetics and Epigenomics Source Type: research