Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Martinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres
Data de Publicação: 2021
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: International Journal of Nutrology (Online)
Texto Completo: https://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/25
Resumo: Obesity is a multifactorial health problem characterized by the excessive accumulation of fat in the body and affects approximately 338 million children and adolescents worldwide. For this reason, this study consisted of a literature review to investigate how the causes and treatments of pediatric obesity are being addressed in light of epigenetic modulation as a factor in metabolic programming. For this, preferentially original articles published in English between the years 2017 to 2021 in the PubMed and Scholar Google databases were searched using the epigenetics descriptors; epigenetic modulation; child obesity; metabolic syndrome, combined with each other. A total of 54,000 articles were returned to searches in PubMed and 16,107,000 in Scholar Google. Fewer than 500 studies jointly addressed epigenetics and aspects of obesity or metabolic syndromes in childhood. Only 14 works matched the search criteria. The most discussed epigenetic mechanism in the literature is DNA methylation, whose rates observed mainly in CpG islands of promoter regions in several genes contribute to the prevention and early diagnosis of obesity and other pediatric comorbidities even before birth, based on the correlation between the epigenetic marks, maternal and paternal health and anthropometric indices. Although experimental studies on infant metabolic programming are scarce, existing knowledge suggests that environmental, nutritional, and energy expenditure changes are capable of modulating the epigenome and reversing marks that induce susceptibility to metabolic comorbidities.
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spelling Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulationDNA methylationmiRNAsEpigenetic programmingMetabolic comorbiditiesAdiposityObesity is a multifactorial health problem characterized by the excessive accumulation of fat in the body and affects approximately 338 million children and adolescents worldwide. For this reason, this study consisted of a literature review to investigate how the causes and treatments of pediatric obesity are being addressed in light of epigenetic modulation as a factor in metabolic programming. For this, preferentially original articles published in English between the years 2017 to 2021 in the PubMed and Scholar Google databases were searched using the epigenetics descriptors; epigenetic modulation; child obesity; metabolic syndrome, combined with each other. A total of 54,000 articles were returned to searches in PubMed and 16,107,000 in Scholar Google. Fewer than 500 studies jointly addressed epigenetics and aspects of obesity or metabolic syndromes in childhood. Only 14 works matched the search criteria. The most discussed epigenetic mechanism in the literature is DNA methylation, whose rates observed mainly in CpG islands of promoter regions in several genes contribute to the prevention and early diagnosis of obesity and other pediatric comorbidities even before birth, based on the correlation between the epigenetic marks, maternal and paternal health and anthropometric indices. Although experimental studies on infant metabolic programming are scarce, existing knowledge suggests that environmental, nutritional, and energy expenditure changes are capable of modulating the epigenome and reversing marks that induce susceptibility to metabolic comorbidities.MetaScience Press2021-12-23info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/2510.54448/ijn22104International Journal of Nutrology; Vol. 15 No. 1 (2022): International Journal of Nutrology (IJN) - January 20222595-28541984-301110.54448/ijn221reponame:International Journal of Nutrology (Online)instname:Associação Brasileira de Nutrologia (ABRAN)instacron:ABRANenghttps://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/25/20Copyright (c) 2021 International Journal of Nutrologyinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessMartinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres2022-02-11T18:24:19Zoai:ojs2.ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com:article/25Revistahttps://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijnONGhttps://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/oaiijn@zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com || editorchief@zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com10.544482595-28541984-3011opendoar:2022-02-11T18:24:19International Journal of Nutrology (Online) - Associação Brasileira de Nutrologia (ABRAN)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
title Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
spellingShingle Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
Martinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres
DNA methylation
miRNAs
Epigenetic programming
Metabolic comorbidities
Adiposity
title_short Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
title_full Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
title_fullStr Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
title_full_unstemmed Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
title_sort Programming of obesity and pediatric metabolic syndromes: a review in light of epigenetic modulation
author Martinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres
author_facet Martinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Martinho, Liana Carla Albuquerque Peres
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv DNA methylation
miRNAs
Epigenetic programming
Metabolic comorbidities
Adiposity
topic DNA methylation
miRNAs
Epigenetic programming
Metabolic comorbidities
Adiposity
description Obesity is a multifactorial health problem characterized by the excessive accumulation of fat in the body and affects approximately 338 million children and adolescents worldwide. For this reason, this study consisted of a literature review to investigate how the causes and treatments of pediatric obesity are being addressed in light of epigenetic modulation as a factor in metabolic programming. For this, preferentially original articles published in English between the years 2017 to 2021 in the PubMed and Scholar Google databases were searched using the epigenetics descriptors; epigenetic modulation; child obesity; metabolic syndrome, combined with each other. A total of 54,000 articles were returned to searches in PubMed and 16,107,000 in Scholar Google. Fewer than 500 studies jointly addressed epigenetics and aspects of obesity or metabolic syndromes in childhood. Only 14 works matched the search criteria. The most discussed epigenetic mechanism in the literature is DNA methylation, whose rates observed mainly in CpG islands of promoter regions in several genes contribute to the prevention and early diagnosis of obesity and other pediatric comorbidities even before birth, based on the correlation between the epigenetic marks, maternal and paternal health and anthropometric indices. Although experimental studies on infant metabolic programming are scarce, existing knowledge suggests that environmental, nutritional, and energy expenditure changes are capable of modulating the epigenome and reversing marks that induce susceptibility to metabolic comorbidities.
publishDate 2021
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2021-12-23
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
format article
status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/25
10.54448/ijn22104
url https://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/25
identifier_str_mv 10.54448/ijn22104
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://ijn.zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com/index.php/ijn/article/view/25/20
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Copyright (c) 2021 International Journal of Nutrology
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Copyright (c) 2021 International Journal of Nutrology
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv MetaScience Press
publisher.none.fl_str_mv MetaScience Press
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv International Journal of Nutrology; Vol. 15 No. 1 (2022): International Journal of Nutrology (IJN) - January 2022
2595-2854
1984-3011
10.54448/ijn221
reponame:International Journal of Nutrology (Online)
instname:Associação Brasileira de Nutrologia (ABRAN)
instacron:ABRAN
instname_str Associação Brasileira de Nutrologia (ABRAN)
instacron_str ABRAN
institution ABRAN
reponame_str International Journal of Nutrology (Online)
collection International Journal of Nutrology (Online)
repository.name.fl_str_mv International Journal of Nutrology (Online) - Associação Brasileira de Nutrologia (ABRAN)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv ijn@zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com || editorchief@zotarellifilhoscientificworks.com
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