Background: Obesity is a global rising problem with epidemiological dimension. Obese parents can have programming effects on their offspring leading to obesity and associated diseases in later life. This constitutes a vicious circle. Epidemiological data and studies in rodents demonstrated differential programming effects in male and female offspring, but the timing of their developmental origin is not known.
Methods: This study investigated if sex-specific programming effects of parental obesity can already be detected in the pre-implantation period. Diet-induced obese male or female mice were mated with normal-weight partners and blastocysts were recovered.
Results: Gene expression profiling revealed sex-specific responses of the blastocyst transcriptome to maternal and paternal obesity. The changes in the transcriptome of male blastocysts were more pronounced than those of female blastocysts, with a stronger impact of paternal than of maternal obesity. The sperm of obese mice revealed an increased abundance of several miRNAs compared with lean mice.
Conclusions: Our study indicates that sex-specific programming effects of parental obesity already start in the pre-implantation period and reveals specific alterations of the sperm miRNA profile as mechanistic link to programming effects of paternal obesity.