Media Release
November 20 2006
Blocking an inter-generational cycle of obesity

Picture courtesy of The Advertiser
Photographer: Gretta Leslie-Allen
Being exposed to high levels of nutrition before birth can influence
the development of networks within the brain that regulate appetite to
permanently set a pattern of appetite for life, according to researchers
from the University of South Australia.
In addition to changing the way in which the brain develops, high levels
of nutrition before birth stimulate the developing fat cells, making
them more likely to increase in size, resulting in obese babies who stay
obese throughout their lives.
How babies respond to nutrition from their mothers before birth and how
the nutritional environment before birth impacts on health after birth
has been the focus of a major research program being undertaken by
UniSA’s Pro Vice Chancellor: Research and Innovation,
Professor Caroline McMillen.
“Babies born with a high birth weight have an increased risk in later
life of obesity and associated health risks including diabetes,” Prof
McMillen said.
“More women are entering pregnancy with a high body mass index and a
range of studies worldwide have shown that heavier mothers generally
have heavier babies who grow up to be heavier adults with resultant
health risks. There is currently a real concern that the programming of
obesity from before birth will result in an inter-generational cycle of
obesity,” Professor McMillen said.
What is clear and what hasn’t been dealt with effectively to this point
is that obesity is established very early in life, according to
postdoctoral research fellow,
Beverly Muhlhausler from UniSA’s
Early Origins of Adult Health laboratory.
“We need to stop infants from becoming obese in the first place,”
Muhlhausler said.
“Understanding what happens early on can help to define the critical
window in which to introduce an intervention that will block the obesity
cycle. We know that window of opportunity is small and we know that we
have to intervene very early in development to have a lasting effect.
“Evidence from our work suggests that the neural network, the pathway
that regulates appetite and food choices in the brain, is more flexible
or ‘plastic’ as it develops before birth and for a short time after
birth but once the neural connection is set up, the appetite regulation
pattern becomes permanently set,” Muhlhausler said.
The researchers believe that the same early setup applies to genes
within the fat cells, which regulate how much fat is made in response to
particular stimuli such as a meal or high glucose.
“Having an understanding of the response mechanisms that are set early
in life will help us to intervene early in the neonatal period and
potentially prevent childhood obesity,” Muhlhausler said.
The research by Prof McMillen and Muhlhausler has been given a boost
with funding from a National Health
and Medical Research Council project grant to look at the early
origins of obesity. Their research will focus on intervening to block
the effects of over nutrition by administering a specific drug that can
stop a particular gene inside fat cells from being over activated and
producing too much fat tissue.
“We’ve shown that this gene is switched on too early in an environment
of high nutrition. If we can block this gene early, we can cut the
obesity rate in the offspring of obese mothers and the
inter-generational cycle of obesity will be broken. Understanding the
response mechanisms that are set up early in life will help us to move
forward,” Muhlhausler said.
“While we know that over nutrition before birth makes obesity harder to
reverse, watching too much television, lack of exercise and eating junk
food will still make people fat. Healthy food choices and moderate
activity levels are very important for everyone, regardless of their
beginnings.”
Researchers in the Early Origins of Adult Health laboratory, based
within UniSA’s Sansom
Institute, have won three National Health and Medical Research
Council (NHMRC) project grants worth more than $1 million to look at how
events before birth (changes in nutrition around conception, and too
much or not enough nutrition) can have an impact on adult health.
In addition to the early origins of obesity, Prof McMillen is conducting
studies with National Heart Foundation Research Fellow
Dr Janna Morrison on how the heart functions in low birth weight
babies (less than 2.5 kilograms) and why small babies have a twofold
risk of developing cardiovascular disease when compared with normal
birth weight babies.
Dr Morrison is also undertaking research with Dr Giuseppe Posterino on
under nutrition caused by dieting around the time of conception, which
causes changes in development before birth that could be related to
changes in adult health.
These NHMRC grants support the career development of three postdoctoral
students, each with a defined role in each of the projects, who will
play a strong leadership role in carrying out those projects.
Contact for interview
-
Beverly Muhlhausler mobile 0402 143 949 email beverly.muhlhausler@unisa.edu.au
Media contact
- Geraldine Hinter office (08) 8302 0963 mobile 0417 861 832 email geraldine.hinter@unisa.edu.au
