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Maternal diabetes causes developmental delay and death in early-somite mouse embryos.
Zhao, Jing; Hakvoort, Theodorus B M; Ruijter, Jan M; Jongejan, Aldo; Koster, Jan; Swagemakers, Sigrid M A; Sokolovic, Aleksandar; Lamers, Wouter H.
Afiliação
  • Zhao J; Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Hakvoort TBM; Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Ruijter JM; Department of Anatomy, Embryology & Physiology, AMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Jongejan A; Bioinformatics Laboratory, Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Biostatistics & Bioinformatics, AMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Koster J; Department of Oncogenomics, AMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Swagemakers SMA; Department of Informatics, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
  • Sokolovic A; Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  • Lamers WH; Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands. w.h.lamers@amc.uva.nl.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 11714, 2017 09 15.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28916763
Maternal diabetes causes congenital malformations and delays embryonic growth in the offspring. We investigated effects of maternal diabetes on mouse embryos during gastrulation and early organogenesis (ED7.5-11.5). Female mice were made diabetic with streptozotocin, treated with controlled-release insulin implants, and mated. Maternal blood glucose concentrations increased up to embryonic day (ED) 8.5. Maternal hyperglycemia induced severe growth retardation (approx.1 day) in 53% of the embryos on ED8.5, death in most of these embryos on ED9.5, and the termination of pregnancy on ED10.5 in litters with >20% dead embryos. Due to this selection, developmental delays and reduction in litter size were no longer observed thereafter in diabetic pregnancies. Male and female embryos were equally sensitive. High-throughput mRNA sequencing and pathway analysis of differentially expressed genes showed that retarded embryos failed to mount the adaptive suppression of gene expression that characterized non-retarded embryos (cell proliferation, cytoskeletal remodeling, oxidative phosphorylation). We conclude that failure of perigastrulation embryos of diabetic mothers to grow and survive is associated with their failure to shut down pathways that are strongly down-regulated in otherwise similar non-retarded embryos. Embryos that survive the early and generalized adverse effect of maternal diabetes, therefore, appear the subset in which malformations become manifest.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Gravidez em Diabéticas / Deficiências do Desenvolvimento / Diabetes Mellitus Experimental / Embrião de Mamíferos / Perda do Embrião Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Gravidez em Diabéticas / Deficiências do Desenvolvimento / Diabetes Mellitus Experimental / Embrião de Mamíferos / Perda do Embrião Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article