| Literature DB >> 11979387 |
William Simonson1, Sheela Ramanathan, Sabine Bieg, Philippe Poussier, Ake Lernmark.
Abstract
Dietary factors have been reported to affect the development of spontaneous diabetes in various colonies of inbred and outbred diabetes-prone (DP) BioBreeding (BB) rats. Several studies have attributed a protective effect to a diet omitting crude protein mixtures in favor of purified casein, hydrolyzed casein, or free amino acids. We have used inbred BB rats, all of which become diabetic in specific pathogen-free (SPF) conditions when fed ordinary rat chow, to test the capacity of 2 different protein-free diets to modulate BB rat diabetes in 2 distinct pathogen-free environments. BB rats known to all develop diabetes by 100 days of age were fed from birth with 1 of 3 diets. By 120 days of age, 100% of the animals on a standard diabetogenic chow diet, 83% of animals on an amino acid-based protein-free diet, and 100% of animals on a hydrolyzed casein-based diet had developed diabetes (P >.05). A slight delay in the age of onset was observed among rats fed the amino acid-based diet, but this delay coincided with a reduction in weight gain among these animals compared with the rats on a standard diet. Histology showed insulitis in all rats at either diabetes onset or 120 days of age. We conclude that our unique strain of specific pathogen-free BB rats are not protected from diabetes when fed an amino acid-based diet and suggest that their insensitivity to dietary manipulation may be due to an as yet unknown factor present in the diabetes-resistant (DR), but not the DP BB rat genetic background. Copyright 2002, Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11979387 DOI: 10.1053/meta.2002.31979
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolism ISSN: 0026-0495 Impact factor: 8.694