Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies

Abstract Objective: To discuss the recent literature on paternal obesity, focusing on the possible mechanisms of transmission of the phenotypes from the father to the children. Sources: A non-systematic review in the PubMed database found few publications in which paternal obesity was implicated in the adverse transmission of characteristics to offspring. Specific articles on epigenetics were also evaluated. As the subject is recent and still controversial, all articles were considered regardless of year of publication. Summary of findings: Studies in humans and animals have established that paternal obesity impairs their hormones, metabolism, and sperm function, which can be transmitted to their offspring. In humans, paternal obesity results in insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes and increased levels of cortisol in umbilical cord blood, which increases the risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Notably, there is an association between body fat in parents and the prevalence of obesity in their daughters. In animals, paternal obesity led to offspring alterations on glucose-insulin homeostasis, hepatic lipogenesis, hypothalamus/feeding behavior, kidney of the offspring; it also impairs the reproductive potential of male offspring with sperm oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. An explanation for these observations (human and animal) is epigenetics, considered the primary tool for the transmission of phenotypes from the father to offspring, such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, and non-coding RNA. Conclusions: Paternal obesity can induce programmed phenotypes in offspring through epigenetics. Therefore, it can be considered a public health problem, affecting the children's future life.

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Main Authors: Ornellas,Fernanda, Carapeto,Priscila V., Mandarim-de-Lacerda,Carlos A., Aguila,Marcia B.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria 2017
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0021-75572017000600551
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spelling oai:scielo:S0021-755720170006005512017-12-08Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studiesOrnellas,FernandaCarapeto,Priscila V.Mandarim-de-Lacerda,Carlos A.Aguila,Marcia B. Paternal obesity Programming Obese child Chronic diseases programming Epigenetics Abstract Objective: To discuss the recent literature on paternal obesity, focusing on the possible mechanisms of transmission of the phenotypes from the father to the children. Sources: A non-systematic review in the PubMed database found few publications in which paternal obesity was implicated in the adverse transmission of characteristics to offspring. Specific articles on epigenetics were also evaluated. As the subject is recent and still controversial, all articles were considered regardless of year of publication. Summary of findings: Studies in humans and animals have established that paternal obesity impairs their hormones, metabolism, and sperm function, which can be transmitted to their offspring. In humans, paternal obesity results in insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes and increased levels of cortisol in umbilical cord blood, which increases the risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Notably, there is an association between body fat in parents and the prevalence of obesity in their daughters. In animals, paternal obesity led to offspring alterations on glucose-insulin homeostasis, hepatic lipogenesis, hypothalamus/feeding behavior, kidney of the offspring; it also impairs the reproductive potential of male offspring with sperm oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. An explanation for these observations (human and animal) is epigenetics, considered the primary tool for the transmission of phenotypes from the father to offspring, such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, and non-coding RNA. Conclusions: Paternal obesity can induce programmed phenotypes in offspring through epigenetics. Therefore, it can be considered a public health problem, affecting the children's future life.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Brasileira de PediatriaJornal de Pediatria v.93 n.6 20172017-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0021-75572017000600551en10.1016/j.jped.2017.02.004
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language English
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author Ornellas,Fernanda
Carapeto,Priscila V.
Mandarim-de-Lacerda,Carlos A.
Aguila,Marcia B.
spellingShingle Ornellas,Fernanda
Carapeto,Priscila V.
Mandarim-de-Lacerda,Carlos A.
Aguila,Marcia B.
Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
author_facet Ornellas,Fernanda
Carapeto,Priscila V.
Mandarim-de-Lacerda,Carlos A.
Aguila,Marcia B.
author_sort Ornellas,Fernanda
title Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
title_short Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
title_full Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
title_fullStr Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
title_full_unstemmed Obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
title_sort obese fathers lead to an altered metabolism and obesity in their children in adulthood: review of experimental and human studies
description Abstract Objective: To discuss the recent literature on paternal obesity, focusing on the possible mechanisms of transmission of the phenotypes from the father to the children. Sources: A non-systematic review in the PubMed database found few publications in which paternal obesity was implicated in the adverse transmission of characteristics to offspring. Specific articles on epigenetics were also evaluated. As the subject is recent and still controversial, all articles were considered regardless of year of publication. Summary of findings: Studies in humans and animals have established that paternal obesity impairs their hormones, metabolism, and sperm function, which can be transmitted to their offspring. In humans, paternal obesity results in insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes and increased levels of cortisol in umbilical cord blood, which increases the risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Notably, there is an association between body fat in parents and the prevalence of obesity in their daughters. In animals, paternal obesity led to offspring alterations on glucose-insulin homeostasis, hepatic lipogenesis, hypothalamus/feeding behavior, kidney of the offspring; it also impairs the reproductive potential of male offspring with sperm oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. An explanation for these observations (human and animal) is epigenetics, considered the primary tool for the transmission of phenotypes from the father to offspring, such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, and non-coding RNA. Conclusions: Paternal obesity can induce programmed phenotypes in offspring through epigenetics. Therefore, it can be considered a public health problem, affecting the children's future life.
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria
publishDate 2017
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0021-75572017000600551
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