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Publication : High-temperature exposure during the early embryonic stage lowers core body temperature after growth via a hypothalamic Igfbp2-dependent mechanism.

First Author  Yoshimura Y Year  2024
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  29586
PubMed ID  39627352 Mgi Jnum  J:359292
Mgi Id  MGI:7786167 Doi  10.1038/s41598-024-80252-1
Citation  Yoshimura Y, et al. (2024) High-temperature exposure during the early embryonic stage lowers core body temperature after growth via a hypothalamic Igfbp2-dependent mechanism. Sci Rep 14(1):29586
abstractText  The mechanisms underlying individual differences in core body temperature (T(c)) are unexplained by genetic factors and poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether the environmental temperature during early development affects postnatal T(c). Mouse embryos were cultured from pronuclear to blastocyst stage in either standard (37 degrees C) or high (38 degrees C) temperature, and the T(c) of each grown-up adult was measured. The adult 38 degrees C-incubated mice showed lower T(c) than the 37 degrees C group without changes in activity levels. In the hypothalamus of the 38 degrees C group, insulin-like growth factor 1 (Igf1) and IGF binding protein 2 (Igfbp2) gene expression increased. The decrease in T(c) in the wild-type 38 degrees C group was alleviated by brain neuron-specific Igfbp2 knockout. This suggests that IGFBP2 binds to IGF-1 and, inhibits its binding to the receptor, thereby interfering with the thermogenic signaling of IGF-1. These results suggest that one of the factors determining individual postnatal T(c) is the ambient temperature of embryos at an early developmental stage, which could affect epigenetic changes, such as DNA methylation, leading to alterations in the Igf1 and Igfbp2 gene expressions in adulthood.
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