Literature DB >> 30486486

The Divergent Effect of Maternal Protein Restriction during Pregnancy and Postweaning High-Fat Diet Feeding on Blood Pressure and Adiposity in Adult Mouse Offspring.

Dyan Sellayah1, Felino R Cagampang2.   

Abstract

Obesity is a growing health crisis of pandemic proportions. Numerous animal and human studies have confirmed that obesity and related metabolic abnormalities, such as insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease, may be programmed during development by adverse maternal nutrition. We previously documented that offspring of female mice who were protein-restricted during pregnancy alone had no alterations to their body weights, but did display a considerable reduction in food intake, a finding which was linked to reduced expression levels of appetite regulatory genes in the hypothalamus. Whether such observations were accompanied by changes in metabolic and phenotypic parameters remained to be determined. Female pregnant MF-1 mice were fed, exclusively during the pregnancy period, a normal protein diet containing 18% casein (C) or an isocaloric protein-restricted diet containing 9% casein (PR). From birth, the lactating dams were fed a normal protein diet. At weaning, offspring were fed either the standard chow which contain 7% kcal fat (C) or high-fat diet (HF, 45% kcal fat). This yielded 4 experimental groups denoted by maternal diet/offspring diet: C/C, C/HF, PR/C, PR/HF. Our results showed that offspring adiposity was significantly increased in HF-fed offspring, and was not affected by the 50% reduction in protein content of the maternal diet fed during pregnancy. Similarly, blood glucose levels were higher in HF-fed offspring, regardless of protein content of the maternal diet. Systolic blood pressure, on the other hand, was significantly increased in both male and female offspring of dams fed the PR diet, and this was exacerbated by a postweaning HF diet. Our results show that maternal protein restriction leads to elevations in systolic blood pressure, which is exacerbated by a postweaning HF-diet. Our present findings suggest that, while changes in offspring adiposity brought about by exposure to maternal protein restriction during pregnancy may be restored by adequate maternal protein content during lactation, the same may not be true for systolic blood pressure, which was similarly impaired, regardless of the timing of maternal low-protein exposure.

Entities:  

Keywords:  hypertension; maternal diet; metabolism; nutrition; obesity

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30486486      PMCID: PMC6315474          DOI: 10.3390/nu10121832

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutrients        ISSN: 2072-6643            Impact factor:   5.717


  3 in total

1.  Effect of maternal curcumin supplementation on intestinal damage and the gut microbiota in male mice offspring with intra-uterine growth retardation.

Authors:  Lina Qi; Jingle Jiang; Jingfei Zhang; Lili Zhang; Tian Wang
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 5.614

2.  Loss of the Protective Effect of Estrogen Contributes to Maternal Gestational Hypertension-Induced Hypertensive Response Sensitization Elicited by Postweaning High-Fat Diet in Female Offspring.

Authors:  Baojian Xue; Yang Yu; Terry G Beltz; Fang Guo; Shun-Guang Wei; Alan Kim Johnson
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 6.106

3.  Maternal Protein Restriction Altered Insulin Resistance and Inflammation-Associated Gene Expression in Adipose Tissue of Young Adult Mouse Offspring in Response to a High-Fat Diet.

Authors:  Juhae Kim; Alee Choi; Young Hye Kwon
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2020-04-16       Impact factor: 5.717

  3 in total

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