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Department of Pharmacology

 
Author(s): 
Ferland-McCollough, D, Fernandez-Twinn, DS, Cannell, IG, David, H, Warner, M, Vaag, AA, Bork-Jensen, J, Brøns, C, Gant, TW, Willis, AE, Siddle, K, Bushell, M, Ozanne, SE
Abstract: 

Nutrition during early mammalian development permanently influences health of the adult, including increasing the risk of type 2 diabetes and coronary heart disease. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying such programming are poorly defined. Here we demonstrate that programmed changes in miRNA expression link early-life nutrition to long-term health. Specifically, we show that miR-483-3p is upregulated in adipose tissue from low-birth-weight adult humans and prediabetic adult rats exposed to suboptimal nutrition in early life. We demonstrate that manipulation of miR-483-3p levels in vitro substantially modulates the capacity of adipocytes to differentiate and store lipids. We show that some of these effects are mediated by translational repression of growth/differentiation factor-3, a target of miR-483-3p. We propose that increased miR-483-3p expression in vivo, programmed by early-life nutrition, limits storage of lipids in adipose tissue, causing lipotoxicity and insulin resistance and thus increasing susceptibility to metabolic disease.

Publication ID: 
406752
Published date: 
June 2012
Publication source: 
manual
Publication type: 
Journal articles
Journal name: 
Cell Death and Differentiation
Publication volume: 
19
Publisher: 
Nature Publishing Group
Parent title: 
Edition: 
Publication number: