Early-Life Programming of Metabolic Diseases
A special issue of Biomolecules (ISSN 2218-273X). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Medicine".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 June 2021) | Viewed by 14597
Special Issue Editor
Interests: diabetes; pancreatic beta cell; beta cell regeneration; insulin secretion; early-life programming; developmental origin of health and diseases; nutrition-related diseases; obesity; metabolic disorders; diabetes-associated cognitive impairment
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The environmental conditions that are experienced in early life can profoundly influence human biology and long-term health. The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) concept has highlighted the crucial importance of fetal and early postnatal environment in shaping the risk of developing obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases, and other complications later in adult life. Although most studies have concentrated on the maternal environment, it is also becoming evident that paternal exposure to deleterious environmental factors can result in the later development of metabolic disorders in offspring. Such programmed effects might not be limited to the first directly exposed generation—they could also be transmitted to the next generations. The mechanisms which underpin the transmission of the programmed effects across generations are still unclear, but epigenetic changes certainly participate in the early life programming of metabolic diseases.
In the face of the growing pandemic of obesity and diabetes worldwide, elucidation of mechanisms of non-genetic transgenerational transmission of metabolic disorders is of major interest. The identification of nutritional or toxicological factors that affect health in men or women of reproductive age could help to interrupt the vicious cycles of disease risk transmission to their descendants, and bears the potential to halt the diabetes and obesity epidemic encountered at present.
For this Special Issue, we invite review papers or original research articles that address the topic of early-life environmental programming of metabolic disorders, including both paternal and maternal transmission.
Prof. Dr. Jamileh Movassat
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- DOHaD
- environmental programming
- epigenomics
- metabolic programming
- diabetes
- obesity
- metabolic syndrome
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