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Publication : Maternal diet-induced obesity alters muscle mitochondrial function in offspring without changing insulin sensitivity.

First Author  McMurray F Year  2019
Journal  FASEB J Volume  33
Issue  12 Pages  13515-13526
PubMed ID  31581846 Mgi Jnum  J:297438
Mgi Id  MGI:6472787 Doi  10.1096/fj.201901150R
Citation  McMurray F, et al. (2019) Maternal diet-induced obesity alters muscle mitochondrial function in offspring without changing insulin sensitivity. FASEB J 33(12):13515-13526
abstractText  In utero overnutrition can predispose offspring to metabolic disease. Although the mechanisms are unclear, increased oxidative stress accelerating cellular aging has been shown to play a role. Mitochondria are the main site of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in most cell types. Levels of ROS and the risk for oxidative damage are dictated by the balance between ROS production and antioxidant defense mechanisms. Originally considered as toxic species, physiologic levels of ROS are now known to be essential cell signaling molecules. Using a model of maternal overnutrition in C57BL6N mice, we investigate the mechanisms involved in the development of insulin resistance (IR) in muscle. In red and white gastrocnemius muscles of offspring, we are the first to report characteristics of oxidative phosphorylation, H2O2 production, activity of mitoflashes, and electron transport chain supercomplex formation. Results demonstrate altered mitochondrial function with reduced response to glucose in offspring of mice fed a high-fat and high-sucrose diet, increases in mitochondrial leak respiration, and a reduction in ROS production in red gastrocnemius in response to palmitoyl carnitine. We also demonstrate differences in supercomplex formation between red and white gastrocnemius, which may be integral to fiber-type specialization. We conclude that in this model of maternal overnutrition, mitochondrial alterations occur before the development of IR.-McMurray, F., MacFarlane, M., Kim, K., Patten, D. A., Wei-LaPierre, L., Fullerton, M. D., Harper, M. E. Maternal diet-induced obesity alters muscle mitochondrial function in offspring without changing insulin sensitivity.
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