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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- What we cover in this talk
- Chronic disease in later life
- Periconception and preimplantation development
- Epigenetic reprogramming
- Environment around conception
- Maternal obesity and overnutrition
- Developmental origins of health and disease
- Mouse maternal protein restriction model
- Emb-LPD and postnatal cardiovascular phenotype
- Fetal/postnatal growth and adult adiposity
- Maternal Emb-LPD and postnatal behaviour
- Adult Emb-LPD offspring exhibit
- The Dutch hunger winter (5 months) 1944/45
- Periconceptional human nutrition
- Early embryo and maternal mutrition (1)
- Blastocysts ‘sense’ maternal diet by mTORC1
- In vitro model of Emb-LPD programming
- Effect of insulin/BCAA culture to blastocyst (1)
- Effect of insulin/BCAA culture to blastocyst (2)
- Early embryo and maternal mutrition (2)
- Poor maternal diet (1)
- Poor maternal diet & endocytosis in TE
- Poor maternal diet & endocytosis in PE (1)
- Poor maternal diet & endocytosis in PE (2)
- Poor maternal diet & endocytosis in PE (3)
- Early embryo and maternal mutrition (3)
- How does the blastocyst regulate fetal growth?
- Changing the blastocyst's growth trajectory (1)
- Changing the blastocyst's growth trajectory (2)
- Poor maternal diet and brain development (1)
- Poor maternal diet and brain development (2)
- Poor maternal diet and memory
- Early embryo and maternal mutrition (4)
- 5 keypoints
- Thanks!
Topics Covered
- Early embryo development: the interplay between morphogenesis and the environment
- Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) concept
- How maternal nutrition influences events around conception and changes the programme of development
- Maternal over or under-nutrition can both cause adverse health risk
- Mechanistic understanding of how poor maternal nutrition leads to adult disease involving epigenetic, molecular, cellular, metabolic, and physiologic components
Links
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Talk Citation
Fleming, T. (2019, April 30). Maternal nutrition, fetal development and long-term health [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/TPEC3144.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Tom Fleming has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: The Female Reproductive System: from Basic Science to Fertility Treatments
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, my name is Tom Fleming.
I'm a professor of Developmental Biology at the University of Southampton.
My main interest is in early development-
that period in and around the time when the gametes fertilize, the embryo is
established, and the embryo begins
to develop into what's known as a blastocyst in the first stage,
which then implant into the uterus.
This very early stage of embryogenesis.
But, my interest now is not so much those intrinsic processes
of how an embryo develops,
but more of how environmental factors outside of
the embryo can influence that program of development-
that it then entertains.
What are we going to talk about today, in particular, is
maternal nutrition and how that can affect
fetal development ultimately and long-term health.
It's not just embryos developing themselves,
it's how they go on subsequently,
ultimately, affecting the whole lifespan of the organism.
1:04
So, what we will cover in this talk is early embryo development and
this interplay, as I call it, between the intrinsic processes of morphogenesis,
how the embryo morphology develops and how it interacts with its environment.
I'll be bringing in the concept of
the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, or known as DOHaD,
which is how the environment, particularly maternal nutrition can affect long- term health.
Many causes of our diseases can be traced back to
experience in utero rather than our lifestyle as adults.
I'll also be looking at how maternal nutrition influences the events around
conception and how that can then change how the embryo
would develop, ultimately linking with long-term health.
We're going to mostly cover, as a good example,
what happens when a mother's nutrition is poor- under-nutrition,
but I'll have a summary of what happens with over-nutrition,
such as high-fat diets and obesity because they can
both act negatively to affect
long-term embryo development and fetal development, indeed, long-term health.
There at the bottom- mechanistic understanding of how this poor maternal nutrition,
under-nutrition can change the embryo and lead to adult disease.
That will be the main focus as a long example.