Module 2: Epigenetics & Gestational Diabetes Flashcards

1
Q

Birth weights of offspring from mothers affected by the hunger winter

A

Mother well-fed at conception, malnourished during last trimester = baby small at birth, remained small

Mother malnourished during first trimester only = baby normal at birth, higher rates of obesity, normal and mental health problems

  • can carry to grandchildren!
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2
Q

The barker hypothesis

A

“Developmental origins of adult diseases”
-infant mortality can serve as a marker for poverty
-poverty can affect maternal nutrition and breast milk quality
-areas w higher infant mortality rates also have higher rates of heart disease (approx 50 years later)

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3
Q

Nutritional perturbations during pregnancy- trimester 1

A

EMBRYONIC GROWTH slowed by undernutrition, over-nutrition cause hyperglycemia (gestational diabetes)

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4
Q

Nutritional perturbations during pregnancy-trimester 2

A

Undernutrition affects PLACENTAL FUNCTION - alters relationship between fetus, placenta, and mother

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5
Q

Nutritional perturbations during pregnancy - trimester 3

A

Undernutrition slows FETAL GROWTH to maintain PLACENTAL FUNCTION
-effects on fetus depends on deficiency duration

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6
Q

Undernutrition on fetal and placental hormones

A

Lowers hormones (insulin, IGF), affects pancreatic development

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7
Q

Relationship between placental weight and birth weight

A

small placentas (in relation to birthweight) associated with babies who develop diabetes

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8
Q

Hypothesized mechanisms for health of fetus (4 answers)

A
  1. Quality and quantity of maternal nutrition

2.Exposure to stress/high levels of glucocorticoids

  1. Thrifty phenotype hypothesis

4.Genetic/epigenetic influence

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9
Q

1.Quality and quantity of maternal nutrition(under/overnutrition, junk food diet)

A

Maternal undernutrition = lower birthweight –> increased bl. pr –> impaired glucose homeostasis
Overnutrition (HFD or excess calories) = high circulating glucose

Junk food diet - influences offspring to eat junk food

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10
Q

2.Exposure to stress/high levels of glucocorticoids (cortisol)

A

Occur w high glucocorticoids (cortisol) or problems in placental barrier
-glucocorticoids regulate fetal organ maturation
-high cortisol = accelerated organ maturation at expense of fetal growth –> born w low body weight
-Placental 11β-HSD2 inactivates cortisol - (lower amount of 1β-HSD2 –> more cortisol –> lowe birthweight)

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11
Q
  1. The thrifty phenotype hypothesis
A

Poor nutrition in early life causes permanent changes in genes related to glucose-insulin metabolism
-fetus adapt during nutrient restriction - (reduce insulin secretion, increase bl. glucose levels - more for brain and heart)
-reversible, but becomes permanent if persists
-fetus prepared for undernutrition, given food abundance- problem! (disease)

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12
Q

Epigenetics

A

Changes in cell function, do not involve DNA sequence
-ex. DNA methylation impacts how genes are expressed, does not alter sequence

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13
Q

4.Genetic/epigenetic influence

A

-amount of methyl donors in diet influences epigenome
-change in promotor methylation affect gene express. - can extend across generations
-phenotypic affects related to modifications may not be visible until later in life (depend on eviron. factors)

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14
Q

Best studied examples of epigenetic changes in genome

A

-DNA methylation (CH3 groups added to specific bases)
-Histone modification (acetylation,methylation,etc)

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15
Q

“Histone code”

A

Collection of all modifications to histones - acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination

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16
Q

Adding and removing acetyl groups - enzymes

A

HAT- histone acetylase (adds)
HDAC-histone deacetylase (removes acetyl groups)

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17
Q
A
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18
Q

Methylation and de-methylation - gene expression

A

Methylation - turns OFF gene expression –> promotes binding of proteins that silence transcription
De-methylation - turns ON gene expression –> favours transcription

19
Q

Diet and epigenome

A

food contains inhibitors and activators of chromatin remodelling enzymes (DNA methyltransferases, histone acetylases, hisone deacetylases)
-can “program” epigenome

20
Q

Is epigenetic changes inherited through mitosis or meiosis?

A

Both

21
Q

Epigenetic “sensitive regions”

A

-Promotor region
-Metastable epialleles
–>regions of genome that can be epigenetically modified in a variable and reversible manner

22
Q

Gene promotor example

A

-Genomic regions at which epigenetic status varies amongst individuals in a population
-DNA methyl & acetyl. of histone tails most studied

23
Q

3 Types of epialleles

A

1.Obligatory
-determined by genetic variation, DNA mutation
2.Facilitated
- determined by genetic and environmental factors
3.Pure
- determined by environmental factors

24
Q

Cis and Trans Obligatory

A

Cis: epigenetic change occurs at site of mutation
Trans: mutation in one gene causes epigenetic changes elsewhere in genome

25
Q

Pure epiallele is DNA already capable of being methylated?

A

Yes, the amount its methylated depends on amount of environmental factor present

26
Q

Facilitated epiallele-Axin fused mouse pathway

A

-Axin expressed in embryo and adult gene product regulates signalling path
-Transposable element inserted into intron 6 of axin gene
-activates promotor: IAP retrotransposon - can range from low (hypo-methylated) to high (hyper-methylated)

27
Q

Axin fused mouse result

A

Hyper-methylated:
-silence IAP –> normal promotor function –> straight tail
Methylation decrease –> kinked tail

28
Q

Agouti mouse

A

-Mouse agouti region - only 1 allele is functional
-IAP retrotransposon (upstream of agouti gene)
-IAP methylation status range from hypo-methylated to hyper-methylated

29
Q

Agouti mouse result

A

IAP-silenced when hypermethylated = normal weight, brown fur mouse
Hypomethylated = yellow mouse, obsese????

30
Q

How does mothers (mouse) diet affect offspring phenotype via epigenetics?

A

-altering methylation status at IAP retrotransposon

31
Q

Sibling born after mother had bariatric surgery vs before

A

After: offspring less obese, improved cardiometabolic parameters (fasting insulin and BP)

32
Q

Normal hormone production during pregnancy (insulin)

A

-develop temporary insulin resistance to reduce glucose uptake in sk muscle and tissues
-send more to fetus,
-pancreas responds by producing 2x more insulin to clear bl.guose

33
Q

How does GDM occur

A

Mother is unable to produce insulin necessary to maintain normal bl glucose levels

34
Q

Risk factors of GDM

A

-Age>25
-Genetics
-History of diabetes in first-degree relatives
-Previous hitory of GDM, still births or large babies
-eating habits
-overweight or obese

35
Q

Consequences of GDM on offspring

A

-higher blood sugar levels for the fetus = higher fetal insulin production
-insulin is an anabolic hormone: high levels promote growth in fetus (high birth weight)

36
Q

Risks on offspring of GDM mothers

A

-macrosomia (increased birth weight and size)
-respiratory distress syndrome -requires oxygen
-increased blood pressure
-lower HDL-cholesterol (“good cholesterol”)
-increase risk of metabolic diseases

37
Q

Affect on blood pressure in offspring of mom with GDM

A

-increase SBP, no affect on DBP
-SBP higher in offspring males

38
Q

Children born to mothers with diabetes have what times chance of having diabetes?

A

-children born to mothers w diabetes have 3x the risk as they age
-fathers status has little influence

39
Q

Mesoderm-specific transcript (MEST) in non-GDM, D-GDM and I-DGM mothers

A

MEST gene methylation status lower in GDM mothers = higher MEST gene expression higher
-hypometh may foreshadow obesity
-over-express = enlarged adipocytes and fat mass expansion

40
Q

When does GDM develop?

A

3rd trimester

41
Q

Prevalence for T2D in GDM women

A

7x higher risk in GDM women
1 in 5 will develop diabetes within 9 years

42
Q

How to treat at risk women to reduce GDM risk

A
  1. Reduce caloric intake, increase physical activity
  2. Insulin and metformin therapy if (1) is unsuccessful within 2 weeks
43
Q

Vitamin D and GDM relationship

A

Not well known
-vitamin D MAY act on pancreatic beta cells to regulate intracellular calcium
-intracell calc. regulates insulin release from beta cells
LOW VIT D W GDM