Islamabad,
Jan 23: A number of different immunological mechanisms ensure the
successful establishment and maintenance of pregnancy. Imbalance in these
mechanisms is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes.
In a review
published in Advances in Neuroimmune Biology, researchers from the Institute of
Life Science, College of Medicine at Swansea University in the UK examine the
impact of maternal obesity on the inflammatory responses in tissues of both the
mother and the child.
"While great progress has been made in elucidating
the immunological mechanisms that ensure reproductive success, we now need to
understand the impact of a very modern epidemic on immune response at the
materno-fetal interface, as well on the mother and the child," said lead
investigator Catherine A. Thornton, PhD. "Inflammation may have a key role in
many of the detrimental effects of obesity in non-pregnant individuals, and
emerging data suggest that inflammation also links obesity and adverse pregnancy
outcomes."
Evidence of altered inflammatory status with obesity in the
circulation of both the mother and child in pregnancy is emerging. For example,
obese pregnant women have elevated levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6). IL-6 is also
increased in the cord plasma of offspring of obese mothers, and is associated
with increased fetal adiposity and, in a rat model, to hypertension and
increased hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity in adulthood. Altered
inflammatory status of the placenta in association with maternal obesity may
have a critical role in the short term programming of health and disease in the
offspring, the researchers commented. Maternal obesity is associated with an
inflammatory response by the placenta including elevated pro-inflammatory
cytokine gene expression.
The negative impact of maternal obesity on the
immune function of mother and child includes an increased risk for preeclampsia,
likely mediated via inflammation and triglycerides. Increased maternal body mass
index is associated with an increased risk of neonatal early onset group B
streptococcal disease, and an increased risk of respiratory tract infections.
The inflammatory response and immune function of the newborn might relate to
later health outcomes. Hyper-responsiveness of inflammatory function at birth is
linked to the development of allergic disease in infancy.
Maternal
metabolic status during pregnancy and weaning is particularly relevant to
healthy development of hypothalamic neurons that regulate weight and feeding in
offspring, the researchers report. One study demonstrated that a high-fat diet
during pregnancy can induce the expression of hypothalamic peptides involved in
the regulation of food intake and body composition in weanling rats. More
recently, female offspring of fathers fed a chronic high fat diet had impaired
glucose tolerance and insulin secretion. "These findings lead to the suggestion
that such programmed expression has a role to play in adult physiology,
including increased food intake, preference for a fat-rich diet, weight gain,
and metabolic dysfunction," says Dr. Thornton.
"Diseases once found only
in adults are increasing in the paediatric population. The focus has been on
diseases with a clear metabolic component and it remains relatively unknown what
risk maternal obesity during pregnancy imposes for the development of autoimmune
diseases, allergy and asthma, and neurodevelopment and cognitive behavior,"
stated Dr. Thornton. "Animal models indicate that the provision of a normal diet
to the offspring once weaned does not overcome the effects of maternal
overnutrition, so simple dietary changes may prove ineffective. Targeted
maternal immunomodulation might be needed to curtail this potential
pandemic."
Ends
SA/EN
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Inflammation may link obesity and adverse pregnancy outcomes
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