You may not have expected this, but there is new research to suggest  that what a mom eats during pregnancy can impact the baby's chances of  becoming obese.
Here's the press release:
New link between mother's pregnancy diet and offspring's chances of obesity found
Scientists  have discovered that a mother's nutrition during pregnancy can strongly  influence her child's risk of obesity many years later, by altering  their DNA
Scientists have discovered that a  mother's nutrition during pregnancy can strongly influence her child's  risk of obesity many years later.
An international  study, led by University of Southampton researchers and including teams  from New Zealand and Singapore, has shown for the first time that during  pregnancy, a mother's diet can alter the function of her child's DNA.  The process, called epigenetic change, can lead to her child tending to  lay down more fat. Importantly, the study shows that this effect acts  independently of how fat or thin the mother is and of child's weight at  birth.
Keith Godfrey, Professor of  Epidemiology and Human Development at the University of Southampton, who  led the study, says: "We have shown for the first time that  susceptibility to obesity cannot simply be attributed to the combination  of our genes and our lifestyle, but can be triggered by influences on a  baby's development in the womb, including what the mother ate. A  mother's nutrition while pregnant can cause important epigenetic changes  that contribute to her offspring's risk of obesity during childhood."
Researchers  measured epigenetic changes in nearly 300 children at birth and showed  that these strongly predicted the degree of obesity at six or nine years  of age. What was surprising to the researchers was the size of the  effect – children vary in how fat they are, but measurement of the  epigenetic change at birth allowed the researchers to predict 25 per  cent of this variation.
The study was primarily funded  by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC), the National Institute for  Health Research, WellChild (previously Children Nationwide), Arthritis  Research UK and the University of Southampton.
The  epigenetic changes, which alter the function of our DNA without changing  the actual DNA sequence inherited from the mother and father, can also  influence how a person responds to lifestyle factors such as diet or  exercise for many years to come.
"This study indicates  that measures to prevent childhood obesity should be targeted on  improving a mother's nutrition and her baby's development in the womb.  These powerful new epigenetic measurements might prove useful in  monitoring the health of the child," adds Professor Godfrey.
Mark  Hanson, British Heart Foundation Professor and Director of the  University of Southampton's Human Development and Health Unit and one of  the research team explains: "This study provides compelling evidence  that epigenetic changes, at least in part, explain the link between a  poor start to life and later disease risk. It strengthens the case for  all women of reproductive age having greater access to nutritional,  education and lifestyle support to improve the health of the next  generation, and to reduce the risk of the conditions such as diabetes  and heart disease which often follow obesity."
Research  team member Sir Peter Gluckman FRS of the Liggins Institute at the  University of Auckland and the Singapore Institute of Clinical Sciences  comments: "This study provides the most compelling evidence yet that  just focusing on interventions in adult life will not reverse the  epidemic of chronic diseases, not only in developed societies but in low  socio-economic populations too."
The study team are  part of an international consortium involving the Universities of  Southampton and Singapore, the Singapore Institute for Clinical  Sciences, the Liggins Institute of the University of Auckland,  AgResearch New Zealand and the Medical Research Council Lifecourse  Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton.
Professor  Cyrus Cooper, who directs the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, says:  "MRC population-based studies have shown that early life factors  influence risk of disease many years later. Now we can begin to see the  mechanisms by which this happens, opening up new avenues for medical  research and interventions."
Their findings will be published next week (26 April 2011) in the printed journal Diabetes.