Department of Nutritional Sciences, Program in International Nutrition, and Center for Childhood Nutrition Research, New Jersey Institute for Food, Nutrition, and Health, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Department of Pediatrics and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado.
Physiol Rev. 2021 Jul 1;101(3):739-795. doi: 10.1152/physrev.00002.2020. Epub 2020 Dec 3.
Almost 2 billion adults in the world are overweight, and more than half of them are classified as obese, while nearly one-third of children globally experience poor growth and development. Given the vast amount of knowledge that has been gleaned from decades of research on growth and development, a number of questions remain as to why the world is now in the midst of a global epidemic of obesity accompanied by the "double burden of malnutrition," where overweight coexists with underweight and micronutrient deficiencies. This challenge to the human condition can be attributed to nutritional and environmental exposures during pregnancy that may program a fetus to have a higher risk of chronic diseases in adulthood. To explore this concept, frequently called the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD), this review considers a host of factors and physiological mechanisms that drive a fetus or child toward a higher risk of obesity, fatty liver disease, hypertension, and/or type 2 diabetes (T2D). To that end, this review explores the epidemiology of DOHaD with discussions focused on adaptations to human energetics, placental development, dysmetabolism, and key environmental exposures that act to promote chronic diseases in adulthood. These areas are complementary and additive in understanding how providing the best conditions for optimal growth can create the best possible conditions for lifelong health. Moreover, understanding both physiological as well as epigenetic and molecular mechanisms for DOHaD is vital to most fully address the global issues of obesity and other chronic diseases.
全世界有近 20 亿成年人超重,其中超过一半属于肥胖,而近三分之一的全球儿童存在生长发育不良的情况。尽管从几十年的生长发育研究中已经获得了大量知识,但仍有一些问题尚未得到解答,例如为什么现在全球肥胖症流行,同时还存在着“双重营养不良负担”,即超重与体重不足和微量营养素缺乏并存。这种对人类健康状况的挑战可以归因于怀孕期间的营养和环境暴露,这些暴露可能使胎儿在成年后患慢性病的风险更高。为了探讨这一概念,通常被称为健康与疾病的发育起源(DOHaD),本综述考虑了许多因素和生理机制,这些因素和生理机制使胎儿或儿童更容易患上肥胖症、脂肪肝疾病、高血压和/或 2 型糖尿病(T2D)。为此,本综述探讨了 DOHaD 的流行病学,并重点讨论了人类能量学、胎盘发育、代谢紊乱和关键环境暴露的适应,这些因素促进了成年期的慢性疾病。这些领域在理解如何为最佳生长提供最佳条件方面是互补和相辅相成的,从而为终身健康创造了最佳条件。此外,了解 DOHaD 的生理以及表观遗传和分子机制对于充分解决肥胖症和其他慢性疾病的全球问题至关重要。