About this Research Topic
Basic science research continues to contribute to understanding of how genetic, epigenetic and nutritional environmental influences impact the development of physiological systems affecting growth and metabolism, but experimental work often focuses on specific areas, for example pancreatic development and glucose/insulin metabolism, or growth pattern, body composition and fat metabolism. Adverse health outcomes are likely a result of several interacting factors, many of which involve sex-specific responses to the nutritional environment.
This research topic aims to combine knowledge from existing and new studies to increase understanding of interactions between pre- and post-natal nutrition, sex, and physiological systems that contribute to healthy or adverse metabolic outcomes, thus providing a basis on which to develop integrated ‘packages’ of care to improve metabolic health.
We welcome original research, reviews, and mini-review articles focused on, but not limited to:
- Sex-specific endocrine and metabolic responses to the early nutritional environment.
- Mechanisms underlying interactions between sex, nutrition and early growth patterns.
- Targeted postnatal nutritional interventions to promote long term metabolic health.
- Mitigation of long term metabolic and endocrine effects of pre- and post-natal nutritional compromise.
- Interactions between early nutrition, stress response and appetite regulation.
- Early nutrition, sex and glucose metabolism.
Keywords: Prenatal nutrition, postnatal nutrition, sex-specific, developmental endocrinology, growth, metabolic health
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.