Intrauterine growth restriction alters hypothalmic programming in the developing mouse brain

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Publication Type thesis
School or College College of Health
Department Nutrition & Integrative Physiology
Author Challis, Lauren
Title Intrauterine growth restriction alters hypothalmic programming in the developing mouse brain
Date 2012-08
Description Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) creates altered programming in many organs, including the hypothalamus. Programming involves adaptive changes initiated to protect the survival of a fetus following IUGR, which can adversely influence the later response of genes that regulating energy balance. In male mice, IUGR coupled with rapid postnatal catch-up growth predisposes towards early onset obesity. One potential mechanism for this obesity is altered hypothalamic programming of intrahypothalamic cues involving prepro-orexin and prepro-MCH, two energy balance regulating genes as well as the extra-hypothalamic cues of peripheral hormones leptin and insulin. We therefore hypothesized that IUGR would alter hypothalamic programming of prepro-orexin and prepro-MCH genes in association with altered serum leptin and insulin levels in male mice at postnatal day 7 (P7) and P60. IUGR was induced via maternal thromboxane A2-analog infusion in the last week of C57BL/6J mouse gestation. Sham operated dams acted as controls. Sham and IUGR offspring were cross-fostered to unmanipulated dams and weaned to standard mouse chow at P21. In this mouse model, IUGR males, as compared to IUGR females, achieve rapid catch-up growth to sham males by P28 whereas IUGR females do not catch-up to sham females until P77. We measured mRNA levels via quantitative real-time RT-PCR, protein levels via Western immunoblotting, serum leptin and insulin levels via ELISA, and food intake from P21 to P60.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Brain; Epigenetics; Hypothalamus; Intrauterine growth restriction; Mouse; Programming; Obesity
Subject LCSH Hypothalamus; Fetal growth retardation
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Master of Science
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Lauren Challis 2012
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 596,630 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/1775
Source Original in Marriott Library Special Collections, QP6.5 2012 .C43
ARK ark:/87278/s6jd5bn5
Setname ir_etd
ID 195464
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6jd5bn5
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