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Impacts of obesity, maternal obesity and nicotinamide mononucleotide supplementation on sperm quality in mice
Neil A. Youngson, Golam M. Uddin, Abhirup Das, Carl Martinez, Haley Connaughton, Sara Whiting, Josephine Yu, David Sinclair, R. John Aitken, Margaret J. Morris
Reproduction · 2019 · ▲ 39 citations
Abstract
Male fertility and sperm quality are negatively impacted by obesity. Furthermore, recent evidence has shown that male offspring from obese rat mothers also have reduced sperm quality and fertility. Here, we extend work in this area by comparing the effects of both maternal obesity and offspring post-weaning diet-induced obesity, as well as their combination, on sperm quality in mice. We additionally tested whether administration of the NAD+-booster nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) can ameliorate the negative effects of obesity and maternal obesity on sperm quality. We previously showed that intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of NMN can reduce the metabolic deficits induced by maternal obesity or post-weaning dietary obesity in mice. In this study, female mice were fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 6 weeks until they were 18% heavier than a control diet group. Thereafter, HFD and control female mice were mated with control diet males, and male offspring were weaned into groups receiving control or HFD. At 30 weeks of age, mice received 500 mg/kg body weight NMN or vehicle PBS i.p. for 21 days. As expected, adiposity was increased by both maternal and post-weaning HFD but reduced by NMN supplementation. Post-weaning HFD reduced sperm count and motility, while maternal HFD increased offspring sperm DNA fragmentation and levels of aberrant sperm chromatin. There was no evidence that the combination of post-weaning and maternal HFD exacerbated the impacts in sperm quality suggesting that they impact spermatogenesis through different mechanisms. Surprisingly NMN reduced sperm count, vitality and increased sperm oxidative DNA damage, which was associated with increased NAD+ in testes. A subsequent experiment using oral NMN at 400 mg/kg body weight was not associated with reduced sperm viability, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction(definition) or increased NAD+ in testes, suggesting that the negative impacts on sperm could be dependent on dose or mode of administration.
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- DOI
- 10.1530/rep-18-0574
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- 2026-06-16 MST
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APA
Youngson, N.A., Uddin, G.M., Das, A., Martinez, C., Connaughton, H., Whiting, S., Yu, J., Sinclair, D., Aitken, R.J., & Morris, M.J. (2019). Impacts of obesity, maternal obesity and nicotinamide mononucleotide supplementation on sperm quality in mice. <em>Reproduction</em>. https://doi.org/10.1530/rep-18-0574
Vancouver
Youngson NA, Uddin GM, Das A, Martinez C, Connaughton H, Whiting S, et al. Impacts of obesity, maternal obesity and nicotinamide mononucleotide supplementation on sperm quality in mice. Reproduction. 2019. doi:10.1530/rep-18-0574.
BibTeX
@article{neil2019Impact,
title = {Impacts of obesity, maternal obesity and nicotinamide mononucleotide supplementation on sperm quality in mice},
author = {Neil A. Youngson and Golam M. Uddin and Abhirup Das and Carl Martinez and Haley Connaughton and Sara Whiting and Josephine Yu and David Sinclair and R. John Aitken and Margaret J. Morris},
journal = {Reproduction},
year = {2019},
doi = {10.1530/rep-18-0574},
}
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