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Title

Correlation between newborn weight and serum BCAAs in pregnant women with diabetes.

Authors

Tang, Na; Liu, Yajin; Yang, Sa; Zhong, Mengyu; Cui, Dongqing; Chai, Ou; Wang, Yurong; Liu, Yunwei; Zhang, Xuejiao; Hou, Zhimin; Sun, Haipeng

Abstract

Background: Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs), including leucine, isoleucine, and valine, are essential amino acids for mammals. Maternal BCAAs during pregnancy have been associated with newborn development. Meanwhile, BCAAs have been tightly linked with insulin resistance and diabetes in recent years. Diabetes in pregnancy is a common metabolic disorder. The current study aims to assess the circulating BCAA levels in pregnant women with diabetes and their relationship with neonatal development. Methods: The serum concentrations of BCAAs and their corresponding branched-chain α-keto acids (BCKAs) catabolites in 33 pregnant women with normal glucose tolerance, 16 pregnant women with type 2 diabetes before pregnancy (PDGM), and 15 pregnant women with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) were determined using a liquid chromatography system coupled to a mass spectrometer. The data were tested for normal distribution and homogeneity of variance before statistical analysis. Correlations were computed with the Pearson correlation coefficient. Results: The maternal serum BCAAs and BCKAs levels during late pregnancy were higher in women with PGDM than those in healthy women. Meanwhile, the circulating BCAAs and BCKAs showed no significant changes in women with GDM compared with those in healthy pregnant women. Furthermore, the circulating BCAA and BCKA levels in women with PGDM were positively correlated with the weight of the newborn. The circulating leucine level in women with GDM was positively correlated with the weight of the newborn. BCAA and BCKA levels in healthy pregnant women showed no correlation with newborn weight. Conclusions: The serum BCAAs in pregnant women with diabetes, which was elevated in PGDM but not GDM, were positively correlated with newborn weight. These findings highlight potential approaches for early identification of high-risk individuals and interventions to reduce the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes.

Subjects

GESTATIONAL diabetes; HIGH-risk pregnancy; PREGNANT women; ESSENTIAL amino acids; NEWBORN infants; TYPE 2 diabetes; PREGNANCY outcomes

Publication

Nutrition & Diabetes, 2024, Vol 14, Issue 1, p1

ISSN

2044-4052

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/s41387-024-00301-6

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