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1.
The aim of the study was to assess the impact of preweaning overnutrition upon the ontogeny of intestinal microbiota, alkaline phosphatase activity (AP) and parameters of growth and obesity in male Sprague-Dawley rats. We tested whether intestinal characteristics acquired in suckling pups could programme the development of enhanced fat deposition during normalized nutrition beyond weaning. Postnatal nutrition was manipulated by adjusting the number of pups in the nest to 4 (small litters--SL) and 10 (normal litters--NL). In the postweaning period both groups were fed with a standard diet. The jejunal and colonic Lactobacillus/Enterococcus (LAB) and the Bacteroides/Prevotella (BAC) were determined using the FISH technique, and the jejunal AP activity was assayed histochemically. At 15 and 20 days of age the SL pups became heavier, displayed increased adiposity accompanied by significantly higher LAB and lower numbers of BAC and with higher AP activity in comparison with rats nursed in NL nests. These differences persisted to day 40 and withdrawal of the previous causal dietary influence did not prevent the post-weaning fat accretion. These results reveal the significance of early nutritional imprint upon the gut microbial/functional development and allow better understanding of their involvement in the control of obesity.  相似文献   

2.
The influence was evaluated of post-weaning normal nutrition and over-nutrition upon the development of the intestinal microbiota, the alkaline phosphatase activity (AP) and occurrence of obesity in male Sprague-Dawley rats (from days 21 to 40 the control rats were submitted to ad libitum intake of a standard laboratory diet whereas overfed rats received the same diet supplemented with milk-based high fat liquid diet). The jejunal numbers of two dominant divisions of bacteria, i.e. Firmicutes (Lactobacillus/ Enterococcus — LAB) and the Bacteroidetes (Bacteroides/Prevotella — BAC), were determined using the fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) method, and the jejunal AP activity was assayed histochemically. On day 40, the overfed rats in comparison with control animals displayed increased adiposity accompanied by enhanced AP activity, abundance of LAB, lower amounts of BAC and, thereafter, higher LAB/BAC ratio (L/B). The numbers of LAB and L/B index positively correlated with body fat, energy intake and AP activity, whereas numbers of BAC showed an opposite tendency. These results revealed the significance of nutritional imprint upon the post-weaning development of intestinal microbial and functional axis and contribute to better understanding of their involvement in energy-balance control and in adverse and/or positive regulation of adiposity.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the relationship between development of obesity and the small intestinal functions two experimental models of male Wistar rats were used in the present work: 1) early postnatally overfed rats, nursed from birth to weaning in small litters (SL, 4 pups/nest), and 2) neonatally monosodium glutamate treated rats (MSG 2 mg/g b.w. administered s.c. for 4 days after birth) submitted to the same early nutritional manipulation. After weaning, all animals had free access to a standard pellet diet and at 40 and 80 days of age their body weight, body fat content and food consumption as well as changes of the brush-border-bound duodenal and jejunal alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity were compared with parameters of the offsprings raised under normal feeding conditions (NL, 8 pups/nest). At 40 and 80 days of age the postnatally overfed pups from SL nests became heavier, displayed a significantly increased epididymal plus retroperitoneal fat pad weight (P<0.01) and significantly higher AP activity in both segments of the small intestine (P<0.01) in comparison with rats nursed in NL nests, although their mean daily food intake did not differ from that of non-obese rats during the postweaning periods examined. In contrast, the same treatment of MSG rats had only a small effect on late appearance of obesity, i.e. in early postnatally overfed and normally fed MSG rats a similar pattern of body weight, food intake, adiposity and AP activity was found after weaning. The effect of MSG-treatment was also accompanied by the appearance of normophagia, hypophagia and stunted growth on day 40 and day 80, respectively. Moreover, the size of fat depots and the increase of brush-border-bound AP activity in MSG rats belonging to the SL and NL groups was quantitatively similar to the values size of these parameters observed in SL obese rats subjected to early postnatal overnutrition. These results indicate that postnatal nutritional experience (overnutrition) may represent a predisposing factor in control rats from small litters for the development of obesity in later life. Permanently increased small intestinal AP activity observed after weaning in both models of obesity when hyperphagia is not present suggest that these functional changes and associated alterations in food digestion could be a component of regulatory mechanisms contributing to the maintenance of their elevated body fat weight.  相似文献   

4.
To investigate the relationship between early nutritional experience, ontogeny of the small intestinal functions and predisposition to obesity development, the following experimental models of male Sprague-Dawley rats were used: 1) rats in which the quantity of nutrition was manipulated from birth to weaning (day 30) by adjusting the number of pups in the nest to 4 (SL), 10 (NL) and 16 pups (LL) and 2) littermates of SL, NL and LL rats fed either a standard or a hypercaloric diet from days 80 to 135 of age. The overfed SL pups were overweight after day 15 and became permanently obese, whereas the underfed smaller LL pups, due to accelerated growth and enhanced food intake from day 30 to day 35, attained a body fat level that did not differ from normally fed NL rats. Moreover, a significantly increased duodenal and jejunal alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity was found in SL and LL rats and these acquired somatic and intestinal characteristics persisted from weaning throughout life. Eight weeks of high-energy diet feeding elicited a similar pattern of intestinal response in SL and LL rats that was clearly different from NL rats. Despite energy over-consumption in these three groups, both SL and LL rats still displayed enhanced AP activity and showed a significant increase in protein/DNA ratio accompanied with a significant body fat accretion. These results indicate that the postnatally acquired small intestinal changes induced by over- and undernutrition could be involved in the similar predisposition to obesity risk in later life when caloric density of the diet is raised.  相似文献   

5.
Epidemiological and animal studies suggest that the alteration of hormonal and metabolic environment during fetal and neonatal development can contribute to development of metabolic syndrome in adulthood. In this paper, we investigated the impact of maternal high-fat (HF) diet on hypothalamic leptin sensitivity and body weight gain of offspring. Adult Wistar female rats received a HF or a control normal-fat (C) diet for 6 wk before gestation until the end of the suckling period. After weaning, pups received either C or HF diet during 6 wk. Body weight gain and metabolic and endocrine parameters were measured in the eight groups of rats formed according to a postweaning diet, maternal diet, and gender. To evaluate hypothalamic leptin sensitivity in each group, STAT-3 phosphorylation was measured in response to leptin or saline intraperitoneal bolus. Pups exhibited similar body weights at birth, but at weaning, those born to HF dams weighed significantly less (-12%) than those born to C dams. When given the HF diet, males and females born to HF dams exhibited smaller body weight and feed efficiency than those born to C dams, suggesting increased energy expenditure programmed by the maternal HF diet. Thus, maternal HF feeding could be protective against adverse effects of the HF diet as observed in male offspring of control dams: overweight (+17%) with hyperleptinemia and hyperinsulinemia. Furthermore, offspring of HF dams fed either C or HF diet exhibited an alteration in hypothalamic leptin-dependent STAT-3 phosphorylation. We conclude that maternal high-fat diet programs a hypothalamic leptin resistance in offspring, which, however, fails to increase the body weight gain until adulthood.  相似文献   

6.
This study was designed to monitor the developmental changes in insulinemia and lipogenic enzyme activities in both inguinal adipose tissue and liver during suckling (7, 9, 14, and 17 days of age) and weaning (22 and 30 days of age) on to either a low-fat or a high-fat diet in lean (Fa/fa) and obese (fa/fa) rats. Tissues were removed through surgery and genotypes were retrospectively determined. During suckling, there was no difference in liver enzyme activities between the two groups. In contrast, adipose tissue fatty acid synthetase was increased by 50% and citrate cleavage enzyme and malic enzyme by 30% by 9 days of age. By 17 days of age, there was a threefold elevation in these enzyme activities and 6-phosphogluconic dehydrogenase and a twofold increase in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase per inguinal fat pad in fa/fa versus Fa/fa. Consistent with these results, fat pad weight was increased by 20%, 50%, and 100% at 9, 14, and 17 days of age, respectively, in obese as compared to lean pups. However only by 17 days of age could a slight but significant increase in insulin level be detected in obese pups. Enlargement of inguinal fat pad accelerated after weaning on to a low-fat diet and still more after weaning on to a high-fat diet. Weaning on to a low-fat diet elicited an induction of hepatic lipogenic enzymes two or three times greater in fa/fa than in lean pups, while weaning on to a high-fat diet blunted the differences between genotypes. The lipogenic enzyme activities displayed per total inguinal fat were three to ten times greater in obese than in lean pups, regardless of the diet. However, adipose tissue lipogenic enzyme activities were much lower after weaning on to a high-fat than on to a low-fat diet in obese pups. The high-fat diet was as effective as the low-fat diet in triggering hyperinsulinemia in obese pups. The increased adipose tissue capacity for lipogenesis, starting during the suckling period, could play an important etiologic role in the development and maintenance of obesity in the Zucker rat.-Bazin, R., and M. Lavau. Development of hepatic and adipose tissue lipogenic enzymes and insulinemia during suckling and weaning on to a high-fat diet in Zucker rats.  相似文献   

7.
Two groups of Wistar female rats were respectively fed ad libitum a standard stock diet containing 22 p. 100 protein (n = 93) and a diet containing 7.5 p. 100 protein (n = 189) for 8 weeks. They were mated with male rats of the same strain after 2 weeks of these diets. A small decrease (8 p. 100) in fecundity was observed but this moderate protein deprivation did not affect either the litter size (9.68 +/- 3.50 vs 9.61 +/- 3.69) or the percentage of stillborn pups (4.8 vs 4.9 p. 100). The postnatal mortality of the pups of deprived dams was much higher than that of pups from normal dams (11.2 vs 0.9 p. 100). During the suckling period, the 7.5 p. 100 protein diet did not cover the requirements of the dams. They lost 20 p. 100 of their weight, whereas the weight of the dams fed the 22 p. 100 protein diet remained stable. The weight deficit of the young rats born from deprived dams was about 10 p. 100 at birth but it rose to 50 p. 100 at weaning. During the gestation and suckling periods, the maternal body stores and tissues were mobilized to assure the growth of the young.  相似文献   

8.
The developmental changes of both pancreatic and intestinal enzymes and the influence of dietary composition on enzyme activities were followed in suckling and weaning rabbits. In addition, whole tract digestibility of nutrients was recorded in response to two dietary energetic sources. Rabbits were fed ad libitum either a low fat and high starch diet (group LF), or a high fat and high fibre diet (group HF) between d 32 and d 42, with both groups receiving a growing finishing diet thereafter. Before weaning (d 32) nutrient digestion was high (>75% for organic matter, protein or fat), and then decreased sharply, except for fat. Between d 32 and d 42, digestion in the HF group was 7.5 and 4.6% lower, respectively, for organic matter and protein, while fibre and fat digestion was higher (+14.0 and +5.0%, respectively). Between d 25 and d 42 of age, pancreatic-specific activities of trypsin and chymotrypsin did not change while those of amylase and lipase increased by 1.5- and 76- fold (P<0.05), respectively. However, total activities and relative activities expressed on a LW basis were increased after weaning as a main consequence of a specific increased organ weight and pancreatic protein content. Relative activities of trypsin and chymotrypsin increased by 63 and 56% (P<0.01) after weaning, respectively. Total activities of pancreatic enzymes measured in the total small intestinal contents increased during the same period, but the range of variations was lower than those measured in the pancreatic gland. Total activities of lipase, trypsin and chymotrypsin measured in the small intestine contents were significantly correlated with pancreas enzyme potentialities. Total small intestine activity of lipase was 58% higher (P<0.001) in HF than in LF group while the other pancreatic and intestinal enzyme activities measured were not influenced by the energetic sources of the diet. Decreased digestibility of organic matter and protein observed with the HF diet could not be related to changes in pancreatic or intestinal enzymatic profiles and may be more dependent on quality of dietary ingredients.  相似文献   

9.
The objective of the present experiment was to assess the involvement of small intestine in expression of susceptibility or resistance to the high-fat/high-energy diet. The investigation was carried out in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats fed either standard laboratory diet (3.2 kcal/g, 9.5 % fat) or high-fat (HF) diet (4.04 kcal/g, 30 % fat) for 4 weeks as well as in HF rats that were retrospectively designated on the bases of their higher or lower weight gain as sensitive (DIO) or resistant (DR) to obesity. Our results revealed in HF group significant increase in energy intake, food efficiency, weight gain and Lee s index of obesity. Moreover, in comparison with controls, a significantly increased duodenal and jejunal alkaline phosphatase (AP) and alpha-glucosidase activity as well as hypertrophy of jejunal mucosa (increased protein/DNA ratio) were observed in HF fed rats. In contrast, intestinal function was inversely related to energy intake or to the development of adiposity in DIO vs. DR rats. The DR rats had significantly greater AP and alpha-glucosidase activity and more pronounced suppression of energy intake than obese DIO rats. It indicates that the increase of enzyme activities and the lowered effectiveness of nutrient absorption might be a significant factor preventing the expression of obesity proneness. This information contributes to a better understanding of a complex interaction between HF diet feeding and small intestinal adaptability, which determines the energy homeostasis and predict the ability to resist or develop obesity in these phenotypes.  相似文献   

10.
The objective of this work was to study the effect of early weaning on alimentary preference for the macronutrients protein, carbohydrate and fat in adult rats. Male Wistar rat pups were weaned by separation from the mother at 15 (D15) or 30 (D30) days old. Body weight and food intake were measured every 30 days until pups were 150 days old. At 110 days of age, the alimentary preference was evaluated for 1 h on 3 consecutive days. At 120 days of age, the palatable diet test was conducted during 3 consecutive 24-h periods. Body weight and food intake were not altered, but early weaning in rats induced an alimentary preference to fat and hyperphagia of a palatable diet. In conclusion, early weaning, although did not modify body weight or basal food intake, promoted an increased preference for palatable and fatty foods. This demonstrates that early weaning is not capable of promoting perceptible alterations of alimentary behavior under normal laboratory conditions. However, in the presence of a stimulating factor such as a choice of nutrients or a palatable diet, a possible latent effect on dietary preferences may become apparent. Over the long term, this preference for foods with high caloric density can lead to obesity and metabolic perturbations.  相似文献   

11.
Nutritional factors have a critical influence during prenatal life on the development and regulation of networks involved in body weight and feeding regulation. To establish the influence of the macronutrient type on feeding regulatory mechanisms and more particularly on stimulatory pathways (galanin and orexins), we fed female rats on either a high-carbohydrate (HC), a high-fat (HF), or a well-balanced control diet during gestation and lactation, and measured peptide expression in the hypothalamus and important hormones (leptin, insulin) in their pups at weaning. HF weanlings were 30% lighter than control and HC pups (P<0.001). They were characterized by reduced plasma glucose and insulin levels (P<0.01 or less). Their galanin and orexin systems were upregulated as shown by the significant augmentation of mRNA expression in the paraventricular nucleus and lateral hypothalamus, respectively. Inhibitory peptides like corticotropin-releasing hormone and neurotensin were not affected by this dietary treatment during early life. There was, therefore, a more intense drive to eat in HF pups, perhaps to compensate for the lower body weight at weaning. HF diets during early life had meanwhile some positive consequences: the lower metabolic profile might be beneficial in precluding the development of obesity and metabolic syndrome later in life. This is however valid only if the orexigenic drive is normalized after weaning.  相似文献   

12.
Large differences in the composition of diet between early development and adulthood can have detrimental effects on obesity risk. We examined the effects of an intermittent high fat/sucrose diet (HFS) on satiety hormone and serum metabolite response in disparate diets. Wistar rat pups were fed control (C), high prebiotic fiber (HF) or high protein (HP) diets (weaning to 16 weeks), HFS diet challenged (6 weeks), and finally reverted to their respective C, HF, or HP diet (4 weeks). At conclusion, measurement of body composition and satiety hormones was accompanied by (1)H NMR metabolic profiles in fasted and postprandial states. Metabolomic profiling predicted dietary source with >90% accuracy. The HF group was characterized by lowest body weight and body fat (P < 0.05) and increased satiety hormone levels (glucagon-like peptide 1 and peptide-YY). Regularized modeling confirmed that the HF diet is associated with higher gut hormone secretion that could reflect the known effects of prebiotics on gut microbiota and their fementative end products, the short chain fatty acids. Rats reared on a HF diet appear to experience fewer adverse effects from an intermittent high fat diet in adulthood when rematched to their postnatal diet. Metabolite profiles associated with the diets provide a distinct biochemical signature of their effects.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of this study was determine whether the introduction of a high-fat diet during the peripubertal phase induces significant changes in body weight control, glucose homeostasis and the parasympathetic tonus compared with the administration of this diet to adult rats. High-fat diet was offered to male Wistar rats at weaning or during adulthood. A group of rats received high-fat diet for 60 days, from weaning to 81-day-old (HF81) or from 60 to 120-day-old (HF120), whereas 2 other groups received a normal-fat diet (i. e., NF81 and NF120). We analyzed adiposity, glucose homeostasis, insulin sensitivity, and vagal nerve activity. High-fat diet increased the accumulation of adipose tissue in all of the rats, but the difference was greater in the rats that were fed the high-fat diet since weaning (p<0.001). The HF rats showed glucose intolerance with high levels of insulin secretion during the glucose tolerance test (p<0.01). Rats that were fed the high-fat diet presented severe insulin resistance, indicated by a low K itt (p<0.01). Interestingly, the HF81 rats exhibited greater insulin resistance compared with the HF120 rats (p<0.05). The recordings of vagus nerve activity showed that the HF rats had higher parasympathetic activity than the NF rats irrespective of age (p<0.01). Our results show that a high-fat diet offered to rats just after weaning or in adulthood both cause impairment of glycemic homeostasis and imbalance in parasympathetic activity. Importantly, the consumption of high-fat diet immediately after weaning has more drastic consequences compared with the consumption of the same diet during adulthood.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The supply of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) is important for optimal fetal and postnatal development. We have previously shown that leptin levels in suckling rats are reduced by maternal PUFA deficiency. In the present study, we evaluated the effect of maternal dietary intake of (n-3) and (n-6) PUFA on the leptin content in rat milk and serum leptin levels in suckling pups. For the last 10 days of gestation and throughout lactation, the rats were fed an isocaloric diet containing 7% linseed oil (n-3 diet), sunflower oil (n-6 diet), or soybean oil (n-6/n-3 diet). Body weight, body length, inguinal fat pad weight, and adipocyte size of the pups receiving the n-3 diet were significantly lower during the whole suckling period compared with n-6/n-3 fed pups. Body and fat pad weights of the n-6 fed pups were in between the other two groups at week one, but not different from the n-6/n-3 group at week 3. Feeding dams the n-3 diet resulted in decreased serum leptin levels in the suckling pups compared with pups in the n-6/n-3 group. The mean serum leptin levels of the n-6 pups were between the other two groups but not different from either group. There were no differences in the milk leptin content between the groups. These results show that the balance between the n-6 and n-3 PUFA in the maternal diet rather than amount of n-6 or n-3 PUFA per se could be important for adipose tissue growth and for maintaining adequate serum leptin levels in the offspring.  相似文献   

16.
Protein restriction during the suckling phase can malprogram rat offspring to a lean phenotype associated with metabolic dysfunctions later in life. We tested whether protein-caloric restriction during lactation can exacerbate the effect of a high-fat (HF) diet at adulthood. To test this hypothesis, we fed lactating Wistar dams with a low-protein (LP; 4% protein) diet during the first 2 weeks of lactation or a normal-protein (NP; 23% protein) diet throughout lactation. Rat offspring from NP and LP mothers received a normal-protein diet until 60 days old. At this time, a batch of animals from both groups was fed an HF (35% fat) diet, while another received an NF (7% fat) diet. Maternal protein-caloric restriction provoked lower body weight and fat pad stores, hypoinsulinemia, glucose intolerance, higher insulin sensitivity, reduced insulin secretion and altered autonomic nervous system (ANS) function in adult rat offspring. At 90 days old, NP rats fed an HF diet in adulthood displayed obesity, impaired glucose homeostasis and altered insulin secretion and ANS activity. Interestingly, the LP/HF group also presented fat pad and body weight gain, altered glucose homeostasis, hyperleptinemia and impaired insulin secretion but at a smaller magnitude than the NP-HF group. In addition, LP/HF rats displayed elevated insulin sensitivity. We concluded that protein-caloric restriction during the first 14 days of life programs the rat metabolism against obesity and insulin resistance exacerbation induced by an obesogenic HF diet.  相似文献   

17.
Postnatal early overnutrition (EO) is a risk factor for future obesity and metabolic disorders. Rats raised in small litters (SLs) develop overweight, hyperphagia, hyperleptinemia, hyperinsulinemia and hypertension when adults. As obesity is related to hyperleptinemia, leptin resistance and metabolic syndrome, we aimed to investigate body composition, plasma hormone levels, glucose tolerance and the leptin signaling pathway in hypothalamus from early overfed animals at weaning and adulthood. To induce postnatal EO, we reduced litter size to three pups/litter (SL), and the groups with normal litter size (10 pups/litter) were used as control. Rats had free access to standard diet and water postweaning. Body weight and food intake were monitored daily, and offspring were killed at 21 (weaning) and 180 days old (adulthood). Postnatal EO group had higher body weight and total and visceral fat mass at both periods. Lean mass and serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) were higher at 21 days and lower at 180 days. Small litter rats presented higher levels of globulins at both periods, while albumin levels were higher at weaning and lower at adulthood. There was higher leptin, insulin and glucose serum concentrations at 21 days old, while no glucose intolerance was observed in adulthood. Leptin signaling pathway was unaffected at weaning. However, postnatal EO induced lower JAK2 and p-STAT3, and higher SOCS3 expression in adult animals, indicating central leptin resistance in adulthood. In conclusion, postnatal EO induces obesity, higher total and visceral fat mass, lower HDL-C and central leptin resistance in adult life.  相似文献   

18.
LU, HUIQING, ANNE BUISON, VIRGINIA UHLEY AND K-L CATHERINE JEN. Long-term weight cycling in female Wistar rats: effects on metabolism. Obes Res. Weight cycling (WC) induced by ad-lib and restricted high fat (HF) feeding has been shown to reduce final body weight but not body fat percent in female Wistar rats. We examined the metabolic consequences of this type of WC. Five groups of female Wistar rats were fed a HF diet and the sixth group was fed a low fat diet to serve as a control group. Of the five HF groups, four groups were weight cycled by ad-lib and restricted feeding of the HF diet One of these groups weight cycled three times (HFCYC group) while the remaining three groups weight cycled once only, corresponding to the first, second and the third cycle of the HFCYC group. HF feeding induced hyperinsulinemia, hypertriglyceridemia, insulin resistance and elevated adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (AT-LPL) activity levels as compared to rats fed the low fat (LF) control diet. WC further increased blood insulin concentrations and insulin resistance in rats with three cycles of WC. However, blood pressure was not affected by HF feeding or WC. The magnitude of increase of AT-LPL was reduced in weight cycled, HF fed obese rats after 15 weeks refeeding. We concluded that even though WC did not enhance weight gain nor impair weight loss, it did facilitate the development of insulin resistance and may predispose animals to diabetes.  相似文献   

19.
Objective: To determine whether treatment of rat dams with oleoyl‐estrone (OE) has an effect on the offspring's long‐term response to diet restriction during lactation. Methods and Procedures: Control, OE‐treated, and diet‐restricted dams were treated up to day 15 of lactation. Changes in food intake and body weight were recorded for dams and their pups. After weaning, pups received a 4‐week standard diet followed by a 4‐week period of high‐fat diet. Lipid, protein, and energy content of pups plus energy intake and efficiency. Serum metabolites (glucose, urea, and cholesterol) and serum hormones (adiponectin, leptin, insulin, and sexual hormones). Results: Neither pups from dams in the OE‐treated nor in the diet‐restricted group showed significant changes in weight, though these two groups ingested 79% of food ingested by controls. At weaning, the pups from OE‐treated rats were smaller than those of the control or diet‐restricted groups. These pups maintained the differences in size and lipid content during the 4‐week standard‐diet period, whereas pups from diet‐restricted dams showed a sharp decrease in their lipid content. During the 4 weeks of high‐fat diet, the male offspring from OE‐treated dams increased the difference in lipid content in relation to the pups from control dams whereas in females the differences decreased. Female offspring from diet‐restricted dams showed the most marked changes in metabolite and hormone levels in relation to controls. Discussion: Treatment of lactating dams with OE programs the metabolic response of their offspring to resist the challenge of a high‐fat diet that would lead to obesity in adulthood.  相似文献   

20.
Epidemiological and animal studies suggest that diet-induced epigenetic modifications in early life can contribute to development of the metabolic syndrome in adulthood. We previously reported features of the metabolic syndrome in adult offspring of rats fed a diet rich in animal fat during pregnancy and suckling. We now report a study to compare the relative effects of high-fat feeding during 1) pregnancy and 2) the suckling period in the development of these disorders. As observed previously, 6-mo-old female offspring of fat-fed dams suckled by the same fat-fed dams (OHF) demonstrated raised blood pressure, despite being fed a balanced diet from weaning. Female offspring of fat-fed dams "cross fostered" to dams consuming a control diet during suckling (OHF/C) demonstrated raised blood pressure compared with controls (OC) [systolic blood pressure (SBP; mmHg) means +/- SE: OHF/C, 132.5 +/- 3.0, n = 6 vs. OC, 119.0 +/- 3.8, n = 7, P < 0.05]. Female offspring of controls cross fostered to dams consuming the fat diet (OC/HF) were also hypertensive [SBP (mmHg) 131.0 +/- 2.5 mmHg, n = 6 vs. OC, P < 0.05]. Endothelium-dependent relaxation (EDR) of male and female OHF and OHF/C mesenteric small arteries was similar and blunted compared with OC (P < 0.001). OC/HF arteries showed profoundly impaired EDR (OC/HF vs. OHF, P < 0.001). OHF/C and OC/HF demonstrated hyperinsulinemia and increased adiposity. Features of the metabolic syndrome in adult offspring of fat-fed rats can be acquired both antenatally and during suckling. However, exposure during pregnancy confers adaptive protection against endothelial dysfunction induced by maternal fat feeding during suckling.  相似文献   

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