Health
Stress during pregnancy can affect baby's development
New York, Jan 26
Stress hormones in the mother can affect foetal development, a new study says.
To
test whether high stress levels in pregnant mice had an impact on their
offspring, pregnant mice received the natural glucocorticoid
corticosterone at different times during pregnancy.
Researchers
found that increased levels of glucocorticoid stress hormones in
pregnant mice caused the mother to eat more but reduced the ability of
the placenta to transport glucose to her foetus.
"The findings
show that maternal glucocorticoids regulate foetal nutrition. Higher
glucocorticoid hormone levels in the mother can reduce glucose transport
across the placenta and lead to a decrease in foetal weight," explained
Owen Vaughan, lead author of the study.
Glucocorticoid levels in
pregnant women may determine the specific combination of nutrients
received by the foetus and influence the long-term metabolic health of
their children as a result.
"This could have implications for
women stressed during pregnancy or treated clinically with
glucocorticoids, if the mechanisms are similar in humans," he added.
The research showed that under stress, certain genes in the placenta were modified.
One of the genes shown to be altered in the placenta by maternal stress hormones was Redd1.
This
gene is believed to signal availability of other substances, like
oxygen, and to interact with intracellular pathways regulating growth
and nutrient uptake in other tissues of the body.
"Future studies
may prove this molecule is important in the placenta, in linking
environmental cues to the nutrition of the foetus," Vaughan concluded.