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Photo: Principal investigator Jin-Ran Chen uses a DNA sequencer. Link to photo information
ARS-funded researcher Jin-Ran Chen has shown that bone development of unborn young of mother lab rats (dams) fed high-fat rations to induce obesity was significantly impaired when compared to bones of fetal young of dams that were given lower-fat rations. Click the image for more information about it.


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Effect of Mom's Obesity on Baby's Bone Health Explored

By Marcia Wood
February 27, 2014

Does obesity during pregnancy impact the baby's chances of developing strong, healthy bones? No one knows for certain, but ongoing U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)-funded studies at the Arkansas Children's Nutrition Center in Little Rock are helping to provide clues.

In an early investigation, Jin-Ran Chen, a principal investigator with the center's Skeletal Development Laboratory, showed that bone development of the unborn young of mother lab rats (dams) fed high-fat rations to induce obesity was significantly impaired, in contrast to the bones of the fetal young of dams that were given lower-fat rations.

Analysis of fetal bone cells from the skull and vertebrae suggests that changes in the functioning of a gene, HoxA10, may help explain this difference in early bone formation, according to Chen.

Studies by scientists elsewhere have already established that HoxA10 is important to bone formation and growth. But Chen's investigation, documented in a 2012 article in the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology's FASEB Journal, is apparently the first to suggest that obesity, induced by the high-fat regimen, may turn off or "downregulate" this gene, thus suppressing robust bone development.

Chen and his team found that HoxA10 was downregulated as a result of high levels of DNA methylation, a biochemical process also referred to as gene methylation. If the results seen in rats hold true for humans, elevated DNA methylation of HoxA10 may increase the baby's risk of developing bone disease, such as osteoporosis, later in life.

The results also suggest that it is critical to start early in ensuring that a mother's nutrition benefits the developing child's bone health.

Chen collaborated with Thomas M. Badger, Michael L. Blackburn, Ping Kang, Oxana P. Lazarenko, Martin J. Ronis, Kartik Shankar, and Jian Zhang, all with the nutrition center and with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, also in Little Rock. The nutrition center is a partnership of USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS), the university, and Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little Rock.

Read more about the research in the February 2014 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

ARS is the USDA's chief intramural scientific research agency. This bone health research supports the USDA priority of improving children's health and nutrition.