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Developmental and Intergenerational Landscape of Human Circulatory Lipidome and its Association with Obesity Risk

Authors :
A-L Ponsonby
Yung Seng Lee
David Burgner
Johan G. Eriksson
Peter J. Meikle
Bo Burla
Sartaj Ahmad Mir
Fiona Collier
Richard Saffery
Li Chen
Corey Giles
Smith Aat
Anne K. Bendt
Gerard Wong
Mei D
Neerja Karnani
Kevin Huynh
Shanshan Ji
Peter D. Gluckman
Y.S. Chong
Kok Hian Tan
Fabian Yap
Satvika Burugupalli
Kothandaraman Narasimhan
Peter Vuillermin
Karen Mei Ling Tan
Adaikalavan Ramasamy
Markus Rennie Wenk
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Lipids play a vital role in human health and development, but changes to their circulatory levels during gestation and in early life are poorly understood. Here we present the first developmental and intergenerational landscape of the human circulatory lipidome, derived by profiling of 480 lipid species representing 25 lipid classes, in mothers and their offspring (n=2491). Levels of 66% of the profiled lipids increased in maternal circulation during gestation, while cord blood had higher concentrations of acylcarnitines and lysophospholipids. The offspring lipidome at age six years revealed striking similarities with postnatal maternal lipidome (adult) in its lipid composition and concentrations. Comparison of lipids associated with child and maternal adiposity identified a 92% overlap, implying intergenerational similarities in the lipid signatures of obesity risk. We also catalogued lipid signatures linked with maternal adiposity during gestation and offspring birthweight, and validated (>70% overlap) the findings in an independent birth-cohort (n=1935).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........399fb59f662b6ed53090a097b7cd7356
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.23.437677