Literature DB >> 26407845

Postnatal prebiotic fibre intake mitigates some detrimental metabolic outcomes of early overnutrition in rats.

Danielle T Reid1, Lindsay K Eller1,2, Jodi E Nettleton1, Raylene A Reimer3,4.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Overnutrition during early development has been linked to metabolic disease and obesity in adulthood. Interventions to ameliorate this metabolic malprogramming are needed. Our objective was to determine whether prebiotic fibre would reduce weight gain and improve satiety hormone profiles in rats overnourished during the suckling period.
METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats reared in small litter (SL 3 pups) or normal litter (NL 12 pups) were randomized at weaning to AIN-93 (control) or a 10 % oligofructose (OFS) diet for 16 weeks. Body composition, an oral glucose tolerance test for glucose and gut hormones, and gut microbiota were assessed.
RESULTS: At weaning, body weight was higher in SL than in NL rats (P < 0.03). At 19 weeks, body weight was lower with OFS than control (P < 0.04). There was a diet × litter size interaction wherein OFS in SL rats reduced body fat (%) to levels seen in NL rats (P < 0.05). OFS attenuated the glucose response in SL but not in NL rats (P < 0.015). Independent of litter size, OFS decreased total AUC for glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (P < 0.002) and increased total AUC for peptide YY (P < 0.01) and glucagon-like peptide-1 (P < 0.04) when compared to control. OFS, not litter size, played the predominant role in altering gut microbiota which included increased bifidobacteria and Akkermansia muciniphila with OFS.
CONCLUSIONS: Postnatal consumption of OFS by rats raised in SL was able to attenuate body fat and glycaemia to levels seen in NL rats. OFS appears to influence satiety hormone and gut microbiota response similarly in overnourished and control rats.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Glycaemia; Gut microbiota; Oligofructose; Postnatal overfeeding; Satiety hormones

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26407845     DOI: 10.1007/s00394-015-1047-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Nutr        ISSN: 1436-6207            Impact factor:   5.614


  70 in total

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3.  Oxidative stress programming in a rat model of postnatal early overnutrition--role of insulin resistance.

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4.  Early postnatal nutrition determines adult pancreatic glucose-responsive insulin secretion and islet gene expression in rats.

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Authors:  Nadja Larsen; Finn K Vogensen; Frans W J van den Berg; Dennis Sandris Nielsen; Anne Sofie Andreasen; Bente K Pedersen; Waleed Abu Al-Soud; Søren J Sørensen; Lars H Hansen; Mogens Jakobsen
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7.  Long-term effect of altered nutrition induced by litter size manipulation and cross-fostering in suckling male rats on development of obesity risk and health complications.

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8.  The model of litter size reduction induces long-term disruption of the gut-brain axis: An explanation for the hyperphagia of Wistar rats of both sexes.

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