Maternal Western-style diet in nonhuman primates leads to offspring islet adaptations including altered gene expression and insulin hypersecretion

Darian T. Carroll, Joseph M. Elsakr, Allie Miller, Jennifer Fuhr, Sarah Rene Lindsley, Melissa Kirigiti, Diana L. Takahashi, Tyler A. Dean, Stephanie R. Wesolowski, Carrie E. McCurdy, Jacob E. Friedman, Kjersti M. Aagaard, Paul Kievit, Maureen Gannon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Maternal overnutrition is associated with increased susceptibility to type 2 diabetes in the offspring. Rodent models have shown that maternal overnutrition influences islet function in offspring. To determine whether maternal Western-style diet (WSD) alters prejuvenile islet function in a model that approximates that of human offspring, we utilized a well-characterized Japanese macaque model. We compared islet function from offspring exposed to WSD throughout pregnancy and lactation and weaned to WSD (WSD/ WSD) compared with islets from offspring exposed only to postweaning WSD (CD/WSD) at 1 yr of age. WSD/WSD offspring islets showed increased basal insulin secretion and an exaggerated increase in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, as assessed by dynamic ex vivo perifusion assays, relative to CD/WSD-exposed offspring. We probed potential mechanisms underlying insulin hypersecretion using transmission electron microscopy to evaluate b-cell ultrastructure, qRT-PCR to quantify candidate gene expression, and Seahorse assay to assess mitochondrial function. Insulin granule density, mitochondrial density, and mitochondrial DNA ratio were similar between groups. However, islets from WSD/WSD male and female offspring had increased expression of transcripts known to facilitate stimulus-secretion coupling and changes in the expression of cell stress genes. Seahorse assay revealed increased spare respiratory capacity in islets from WSD/WSD male offspring. Overall, these results show that maternal WSD feeding confers changes to genes governing insulin secretory coupling and results in insulin hypersecretion as early as the postweaning period. The results suggest a maternal diet leads to early adaptation and developmental programming in offspring islet genes that may underlie future b-cell dysfunction. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Programed adaptations in islets in response to maternal WSD exposure may alter b-cell response to metabolic stress in offspring. We show that islets from maternal WSD-exposed offspring hypersecrete insulin, possibly due to increased components of stimulus-secretion coupling. These findings suggest that islet hyperfunction is programed by maternal diet, and changes can be detected as early as the postweaning period in nonhuman primate offspring.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)E577-E588
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism
Volume324
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • developmental origins of health and disease
  • developmental programming
  • maternal overnutrition
  • mitochondrial respiration
  • pancreatic b cell

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Maternal Western-style diet in nonhuman primates leads to offspring islet adaptations including altered gene expression and insulin hypersecretion'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this