Literature DB >> 25101919

Accelerated growth without prepubertal obesity in nutritionally programmed microswine offspring.

E A DuPriest1, P Kupfer1, B Lin1, K Sekiguchi1, J Q Purnell1, K E Saunders2, T T Chatkupt2, S P Bagby1.   

Abstract

Poor fetal growth and associated prepubertal growth acceleration are linked to increased risk of cardiometabolic dysfunction in later life, but whether obesity is integral to 'catch-up' growth and its ensuing risks are unknown. In microswine offspring exposed to perinatal maternal protein restriction (MPR), we measured body and organ sizes (during MPR); linear growth and weight gain (birth to 5 months of age); feed intake and utilization efficiency (5-14 weeks); and body composition at 6 and 11 weeks of age (by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, DEXA). During MPR, low protein offspring (LPO) showed asymmetric growth restriction with reduced body weight (Wt):length (Lth) at birth and elevated heart Wt:liver Wt ratio by 2 weeks of age. In LPO, after slow early postnatal growth (0-5 weeks), subsequent linear growth on ad libitum normal feed was absolutely accelerated (cm/week; P < 0.001) over 6-11 weeks but normal thereafter, whereas absolute weight gain (kg/week) was similar to controls but accelerated relative to lower LPO nadir weights. Concurrently, rates of fat and lean tissue accrual in LPO over 6-11 weeks were similar to normal protein offspring in absolute terms (g/5 weeks) but increased relative to lower mass at 6 weeks, yielding normal lean:Lth but reduced fat:Lth ratios at 11 weeks. LPO had higher relative feed intake (g/kg/meal) in both sexes and higher feed efficiency in females over 5-11 weeks of age. Findings suggest that postnatal linear growth acceleration preserved thinness in juvenile LPO. Given separately reported abnormalities of vascular (Bagby et al., 2011) and adipocyte function in juvenile LPO, (DuPriest et al., 2011) findings demonstrate that perinatal MPR programs catch-up growth and cardiovascular abnormalities independently of obesity.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 25101919      PMCID: PMC4435745          DOI: 10.1017/S2040174412000037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Orig Health Dis        ISSN: 2040-1744            Impact factor:   2.401


  35 in total

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10.  Altered adipocyte structure and function in nutritionally programmed microswine offspring.

Authors:  E A DuPriest; P Kupfer; B Lin; K Sekiguchi; T K Morgan; K E Saunders; T T Chatkupt; O N Denisenko; J Q Purnell; S P Bagby
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3.  Effects of postweaning calorie restriction on accelerated growth and adiponectin in nutritionally programmed microswine offspring.

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4.  Altered adipocyte structure and function in nutritionally programmed microswine offspring.

Authors:  E A DuPriest; P Kupfer; B Lin; K Sekiguchi; T K Morgan; K E Saunders; T T Chatkupt; O N Denisenko; J Q Purnell; S P Bagby
Journal:  J Dev Orig Health Dis       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.401

5.  Altered vertebral and femoral bone structure in juvenile offspring of microswine subject to maternal low protein nutritional challenge.

Authors:  Stuart A Lanham; Elizabeth DuPriest; Philipp Kupfer; Cyrus Cooper; Susan P Bagby; Richard O C Oreffo
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  5 in total

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