Literature DB >> 18682533

Maternal obesity and fetal programming: effects of a high-carbohydrate nutritional modification in the immediate postnatal life of female rats.

Malathi Srinivasan1, Catherine Dodds, Husam Ghanim, Tao Gao, Peter J Ross, Richard W Browne, Paresh Dandona, Mulchand S Patel.   

Abstract

Our earlier studies have shown that the artificial rearing of newborn rat pups [first generation high carbohydrate (1-HC)] on an HC milk formula resulted in chronic hyperinsulinemia and adult-onset obesity (HC phenotype). Offspring [second-generation HC (2-HC)] of 1-HC female rats spontaneously acquired the HC phenotype in the postweaning period. In this study, we have characterized the development of the abnormal intrauterine environment in the 1-HC female rats and the effects on fetal development under such pregnancy conditions for the offspring. 1-HC female rats demonstrated hyperphagia on laboratory chow and increased body weight gain beginning from the immediate postweaning period along with hyperinsulinemia and hyperleptinemia. During pregnancy, 1-HC female rats showed several metabolic alterations including increased body weight gain and increased plasma levels of insulin, leptin, proinflammatory markers, and lipid peroxidation products. Although there were no significant changes in the body weights or litter size of term 2-HC fetuses, the plasma levels of insulin and leptin were significantly higher compared with those of control term fetuses. Quantitation of mRNA levels by real-time RT-PCR indicated significant increases in the mRNA levels of orexigenic neuropeptides in the hypothalamus of 2-HC term fetuses. Collectively, these results indicate that the HC diet in infancy results in an adverse pregnancy condition in female rats with deleterious consequences for the offspring.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18682533      PMCID: PMC2575898          DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.90460.2008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0193-1849            Impact factor:   4.310


  36 in total

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5.  Leptin affects pancreatic endocrine functions through the sympathetic nervous system.

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Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 4.736

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  13 in total

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Review 4.  Critical determinants of hypothalamic appetitive neuropeptide development and expression: species considerations.

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8.  Maternal fructose intake induces insulin resistance and oxidative stress in male, but not female, offspring.

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9.  Early Life Exposure to Fructose Alters Maternal, Fetal and Neonatal Hepatic Gene Expression and Leads to Sex-Dependent Changes in Lipid Metabolism in Rat Offspring.

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