快猫短视频

Overweight mothers give birth to biologically older babies

Babies born to obese mothers have shorter telomeres - equivalent to up to 10 years' extra ageing - which may put them at risk of diabetes and heart disease
A woman with large rolls of fat
A healthy weight is best for mother, and her baby
Crispin Rodwell/Alamy Stock Photo

Women who are overweight while pregnant are more likely to have babies who are biologically older than those born to women of a healthy weight. This could put the babies at a higher risk of developing chronic diseases later in life, and may reduce their life expectancy.

Our biological age is linked to the length of our telomeres 鈥 bits of DNA that cap the ends of our chromosomes. Our telomeres shrink every time our cells divide, and continue to shorten throughout life. 鈥淪hort telomeres have been associated with cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis,鈥 says at Hasselt University in Belgium.

The length of a person鈥檚 telomeres at birth varies, though it is not clear why. Nawrot and his colleagues wondered if having an overweight or obese mother might make a difference. The team collected the BMI scores of 743 women who later went on to become pregnant. When the women had babies, they took samples of blood from the umbilical cord and placenta, and measured the length of telomeres in blood cells.

10 years older

The team found that a woman鈥檚 BMI seems to have a significant effect on the telomere length of her baby. The telomeres of babies born to overweight women were around 2.5 per cent shorter than those whose mothers were a healthy weight, while those born to obese women had telomeres 5.5 per cent shorter than the babies of mothers with a healthy BMI.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a large, significant difference,鈥 says Nawrot. 鈥淚n normal ageing, it takes 5 to 10 years to experience a shortening of 5.5 per cent.鈥

There is no knowing whether babies born to obese mothers will live 5 years less than other babies. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 make a prediction,鈥 says Nawrot. 鈥淲e would need to conduct longer term studies, and follow these babies.鈥

How would weight affect telomeres? Nawrot鈥檚 team thinks听 excess fat tissue could be to blame. Fat can trigger inflammation, and produce reactive chemicals that cause oxidative stress, which can damage cells and shorten telomeres. These could cross into a baby鈥檚 body via the placenta, they suggest.

Watch your weight

But at the University of Sheffield, UK, isn鈥檛 so sure. Overweight people may already have shorter telomeres, something they may pass on to their children via their genes, rather than through the placenta, she says.

If that is the case, a father鈥檚 weight could play a role, too, says Henriques. 鈥淛ust like for the mother, if the father鈥檚 BMI is higher, it may mean that his telomeres are shorter to start with, which could influence telomere length in the child,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his would need to be tested, though.鈥

In the meantime, women hoping to get pregnant may want to watch their weight. 鈥淔or every one unit increase in BMI, the babies鈥 telomeres shorten by 0.5 per cent,鈥 says at the University of Birmingham, UK. 鈥淢aintaining a healthy body weight whilst trying to conceive will have long-term benefits for the baby, giving it a head start with longer telomeres,鈥 she says.

BMC Medicine

Read more: Chromosome caps presage the brain鈥檚 decline

Topics: Genetics / obesity / pregnancy and birth