Bacon Smell during Pregnancy Linked to Obesity Risk in Offspring, Mouse Study Finds
NEW YORK – Exposure to bacon odors during pregnancy can predispose offspring to increased weight gain, altered fat composition, and insulin resistance when later fed a high-fat diet, according to a new study published this week. Researchers at Steculorum’s team discovered that maternal dietary volatile odors can trigger metabolic defects in adulthood,even when nutritional value remains consistent.
The findings, which focused on mice, reveal a novel mechanism through which early life sensory cues related to fat can “prime” long-term metabolic health - or, in this case, increase the risk of obesity. This research adds to a growing body of evidence highlighting the critical role of the prenatal habitat in shaping an individual’s susceptibility to metabolic diseases.
Researchers fed pregnant mice either a standard chow diet or a chow diet flavored with bacon odors. while fetal weight gain was similar between the two groups, offspring exposed to the bacon-flavored diet exhibited increased weight gain and fat composition when afterward fed a high-fat diet as adults. These animals also developed insulin resistance, indicating a disruption in metabolic function.
Further investigation revealed increased neuronal activity in dopaminergic reward-associated brain areas of mice exposed to bacon-associated smells,mirroring patterns observed in obese animals. The study also showed impaired activity of neurons expressing agouti-related peptide (agrp) in these mice; normally, food intake inhibits AgRP neuronal activation, but this inhibition was absent in mice exposed to the bacon-flavored diet during advancement when fed a high-fat diet.
“These findings identify a novel mechanism in mice through which early exposure to maternal diet primes long-term metabolic health in the offspring,” the researchers noted. While the study was conducted on mice, the team emphasized the need for further research to determine the translational relevance of these findings to human health.