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A suboptimal maternal diet combined with accelerated postnatal growth results in an altered aging profile in the thymus of male rats.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Tarry-Adkins, Jane L 
Aiken, Catherine E 
Ashmore, Thomas J 
Fernandez-Twinn, Denise S 
Chen, Jian-Hua 

Abstract

Reduced fetal nutrition and rapid postnatal growth accelerates the aging phenotype in many organ systems; however, effects on the immune system are unclear. We addressed this by studying the thymus from a rat model of developmental programming. The recuperated group was generated by in utero protein restriction, followed by cross-fostering to control-fed mothers, and were then compared with controls. Fat infiltration and adipocyte size increased with age ( P < 0.001) and in recuperated thymi ( P < 0.05). Cortex/medulla ratio decreased with age ( P < 0.001) and decreased ( P < 0.05) in 12-mo recuperated thymi. Age-associated decreases in thymic-epithelial cell ( P < 0.01) and thymocyte markers ( P < 0.01) were observed in both groups and was decreased ( P < 0.05) in recuperated thymi. These data demonstrate effects of developmental programming upon thymic involution. The recuperated group had longer thymic telomeres than controls ( P < 0.001) at 22 d and at 3 mo, which was associated with increased expression of telomere-length maintenance molecules [telomerase RNA component ( Terc; P < 0.01), P23 ( P = 0.02), and Ku70 and Ku80 ( P < 0.01)]. By 12 mo, recuperated offspring had shorter thymic telomeres than controls had ( P < 0.001) and reduced DNA damage-response markers [( DNA-PKcs, Mre11 ( P < 0.01), Xrcc4 ( P = 0.02), and γ-H2ax ( P < 0.001], suggesting failure of earlier compensatory responses. Our results suggest that low birth weight with rapid postnatal growth results in premature thymic maturation, resulting in accelerated thymic aging. This could lead to increased age-associated vulnerability to infection.-Tarry-Adkins, J. L., Aiken, C. E., Ashmore, T. J., Fernandez-Twinn, D. S., Chen, J.-H., Ozanne, S. E. A suboptimal maternal diet combined with accelerated postnatal growth results in an altered aging profile in the thymus of male rats.

Description

Keywords

developmental programming, immunosenescence, involution, Aging, Animals, Biomarkers, Cellular Senescence, DNA Damage, Diet, Female, Male, Malnutrition, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Oxidative Stress, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Telomere Shortening, Thymus Gland

Journal Title

FASEB J

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0892-6638
1530-6860

Volume Title

33

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
British Heart Foundation (None)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12012/4)
British Heart Foundation (None)
MRC (MC_UU_00014/4)
British Heart Foundation (RG/17/12/33167)
Medical Research Council (MC_PC_12012)