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Added sugar intake during pregnancy: Fetal behavior, birth outcomes, and placental DNA methylation
Author(s) -
Trumpff Caroline,
Sturm Gabriel,
Picard Martin,
Foss Sophie,
Lee Seonjoo,
Feng Tianshu,
Cardenas Andrès,
McCormack Clare,
Champagne Frances A.,
Monk Catherine
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
developmental psychobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1098-2302
pISSN - 0012-1630
DOI - 10.1002/dev.22088
Subject(s) - pregnancy , offspring , dna methylation , fetus , sugar , biology , gestation , cpg site , methylation , added sugar , endocrinology , medicine , andrology , food science , genetics , gene , gene expression
Pregnancy is a critical time for the effects of environmental factors on children's development. The effect of added sugar intake on fetal development and pregnancy outcomes remains understudied despite increasing dietary intake in the United States. This study investigated the effect of added sugar on fetal programming by examining the association between maternal added sugar consumption, fetal movement, birth outcomes, and placental DNA methylation. Further, primary human fibroblasts were cultured under normal or high glucose conditions to assess the effect of high glucose exposure on cells' DNA methylation. We found that higher added sugar intake across pregnancy was associated with reduced 3rd‐trimester fetal movement ( p  < .05) and shorter gestation ( p <  .01). Our sample size was not powered to detect the alteration of individual placental CpG with genome‐wide significance. However, a secondary analysis suggested that added sugar consumption was associated with differential methylation of functionally related gene families across pregnancy. Consistent with this, high glucose exposure in primary cultured human fibroblasts altered the methylation of 17% of all CpGs, providing converging evidence for an effect of sugar on DNA methylation. Our results suggest that diets high in added sugar during pregnancy may have implications for offspring health via prenatal programming effects measurable before birth.

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