Litcius/Paper detail

Maternal obesity as a risk factor for developing diabetes in offspring: An epigenetic point of view

Simon Lecoutre, Salwan Maqdasy, Christophe Breton

2021World Journal of Diabetes30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

during the perinatal period. These changes result in unhealthy hypertrophic adipocytes with decreased capacity to store fat, low-grade inflammation and loss of insulin-producing pancreatic β-cells. Over the past years, many efforts have been made to understand how maternal obesity induces long-lasting adipose tissue and pancreatic β-cell dysfunction in offspring and what are the molecular basis of the transgenerational inheritance of T2D. In particular, rodent studies have shed light on the role of epigenetic mechanisms in linking maternal nutritional manipulations to the risk for T2D in adulthood. In this review, we discuss epigenetic adipocyte and β-cell remodeling during development in the progeny of obese mothers and the persistence of these marks as a basis of obesity and T2D predisposition.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOffspringDiabetes mellitusObesityEpigeneticsRisk factorBioinformaticsInternal medicinePregnancyEndocrinologyGeneticsGeneBiologyBirth, Development, and HealthEpigenetics and DNA MethylationGestational Diabetes Research and Management