Paternal over- and under-nutrition program fetal and placental development in a sex-specific manner in mice
Abstract
The association between sub-optimal paternal diet and offspring well-being is becoming established. However, the underlying mechanisms are yet to be fully defined. The aim of this study was to establish the impact of over- and under-nutrition, with or without macronutrient supplementation, on male reproductive fitness and post-fertilisation development. Male C57/BL6J mice were fed either control diet (CD), isocaloric low protein diet (LPD), high fat/sugar ‘Western’ diet (WD) or LPD or WD supplemented with methyl-donors and carriers (MD-LPD or MD-WD respectively) for 8 weeks before mating with virgin C57/BL6J females. Placental tissue was collected at embryonic day (E)8.5, to assess early placental (ectoplacental cone) morphology and metabolism and E17.5 for sex-specific transcriptomic profiling. Post-mating, stud male tissues were harvested for assessment of testicular morphology and gene expression, gut microbiota composition and metabolic status. WD and MD-WD males displayed increased adiposity, hepatic cholesterol and free fatty acids and gut microbiota dysbiosis when compared to CD fed males. In the testes, WD and MD-WD perturbed the expression of genes associated with metabolism, Wnt signalling and transcription regulation. Despite no impact on fundamental male fertility, significant changes in ectoplacental cone metabolism, fetal growth, and placental gene expression were observed in response to specific dietary regimens. Interestingly, while CD male and female placentas displayed 301 genome-wide, sexually-dimorphic genes, LPD, MD-LPD, WD and MD-WD male and female placentas possessed only 13, 0, 14 and 15 sexually-dimorphic genes respectively. Our data show that while sub-optimal paternal diet has minimal impact on male fertility, fetal and placental development are perturbed in a sex-specific manner.
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