Early Exposure to a High Fat/High Sugar Diet Increases the Mammary Stem Cell Compartment and Mammary Tumor Risk in Female Mice

Abstract

Obesity and alterations in metabolic programming from early diet exposures can affect the propensity to disease in later life. Through dietary manipulation, developing mouse pups were exposed to a hyperinsulinemic, hyperglycemic milieu during three developmental phases: gestation, lactation, and postweaning. Analyses showed that a postweaning high fat/high sugar (HF/HS) diet had the main negative effect on adult body weight, glucose tolerance, and insulin resistance. However, dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced carcinogenesis revealed that animals born to a mother fed a HF/HS gestation diet, nursed by a mother on a mildly diet-restricted, low fat/low sugar diet (DR) and weaned onto a HF/HS diet (HF/DR/HF) had the highest mammary tumor incidence, while HF/HF/DR had the lowest tumor incidence. Cox proportional hazards analysis showed that a HF/HS postweaning diet doubled mammary cancer risk, and a HF/HS diet during gestation and postweaning increased risk 5.5 times. Exposure to a HF/HS diet during gestation, when combined with a postweaning DR diet, had a protective effect, reducing mammary tumor risk by 86% (HR = 0.142). Serum adipocytokine analysis revealed significant diet-dependent differences in leptin/adiponectin ratio and IGF-1. Flow cytometry analysis of cells isolated from mammary glands from a high tumor incidence group, DR/HF/HF, showed a significant increase in the size of the mammary stem cell compartment compared with a low tumor group, HF/HF/DR. These results indicate that dietary reprogramming induces an expansion of the mammary stem cell compartment during mammary development, increasing likely carcinogen targets and mammary cancer risk. Cancer Prev Res; 10(10); 553–62. ©2017 AACR.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Oct 01, 2017
Source ID
10.1158/1940-6207.capr-17-0131

Entities

People

  • Claudio J. Conti
  • Isabel U. Lambertz
  • Linjie Luo
  • Robin Fuchs-young
  • Scott L. Schwartz
  • Stephen D. Hursting
  • Thomas R. Berton

Organizations

  • Austin Community College District
  • Texas A&M University
  • United States Department of Defense
  • Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
  • University of North Carolina
  • University of Texas at Austin

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Molecular Biology and Genetics
  • Prostate Cancer Biology.
  • Women's Health and Cancer Risk Research: African American Women and Pregnancy Outcomes.

Technology Areas

  • Biotechnology