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Subcutaneous maternal resveratrol treatment increases uterine artery blood flow in the pregnant ewe and increases fetal but not cardiac growth.

Jack R T DarbyBrahmdeep S SainiJia Yin SooMitchell C LockStacey L HolmanEmma L BradshawSteven J P McInnesNicolas H VoelckerChristopher K MacgowanMike SeedMichael D WieseJanna L Morrison
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2019)
Suboptimal in utero environments with reduced substrate supply during critical developmental windows of gestation predispose offspring to non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease (CVD). Improving fetal substrate supply in these pregnancies may ameliorate the predisposition these offspring have toward adult-onset CVD. This study aimed to determine the effect of maternal resveratrol (RSV) supplementation on uterine artery blood flow and the direct effects of RSV on the fetal heart in a chronically catheterised sheep model of human pregnancy. Maternal RSV treatment significantly increased uterine artery blood flow as measured by phase contrast magnetic resonance imaging, mean gestational fetal P a O 2 and S a O 2 as well as fetal weight. RSV was not detectable in the fetal circulation, and mRNA and protein expression of the histone/protein deacetylase SIRT1 did not differ between treatment groups. No effect of maternal RSV supplementation on AKT/mTOR or CAMKII signalling in the fetal left ventricle was observed. Maternal RSV supplementation is capable of increasing fetal oxygenation and growth in an animal model in which cardiac development parallels that of the human.
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