| Literature DB >> 30642135 |
Shihai Zhang1,2, Jinghui Heng3, Hanqing Song4, Yufeng Zhang5, Xiaofeng Lin6, Min Tian7, Fang Chen8,9, Wutai Guan10,11,12.
Abstract
Maternal nutrition plays a vital role in fetal development, early development of neonates, and lactation and regulates the lifetime productivity of offspring. During pregnancy, maternal nutrition alters expression of the fetal genome and the development of tissues and organs via fetal programming. After parturition, maternal nutrition continues to regulate growth and development of piglets through maternal milk, which contains carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and oligosaccharides. Thus, deficiencies in maternal nutrition are detrimental to development of piglets, which can lead to inefficient growth and decreased carcass merit. Protein is an important nutritional component for sows, which not only functions in muscle development, but also plays a vital role in embryonic and neonatal development and lactation. Although effects of maternal undernutrition on neonatal development have been widely studied in sows, the function of different maternal dietary protein levels on fetal development, neonatal growth and lactation performance of sows is largely unknown. Determination of the effects and underlying mechanisms of maternal dietary protein levels on development of piglets is vital to the pork industry. Therefore, we summarized recent reports regarding mechanisms of effects of maternal protein levels on regulation of conceptus growth and early postnatal development though uterine fetal programming and lactation in swine.Entities:
Keywords: dietary protein level; fetus development; lactation; sows
Year: 2019 PMID: 30642135 PMCID: PMC6356768 DOI: 10.3390/ani9010019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Maternal regulation of early development of neonates through fetal programming and lactation.
Effect of different maternal protein levels on early fetal muscle development. Upward-pointing arrow: “increase”; downward-pointing arrow: “decrease”; horizontal arrow: “no change”.
| Animals | Experimental Design | Results | Conclusion | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 primiparous pure-bred Meishan gilt | Digestible energy 13 MJ/kg | Muscle protein synthesis: p70S6K and eIF4E ↓ | Maternal low protein diet throughout gestation and lactation causes retardation in muscle hypertrophy and protein synthesis | [ |
| 16 Landrace × Yorkshire crossbred sows in the second parity | Digestible energy:13 MJ/kg (gestation),14.39 MJ/kg (lactation) | Back fat thickness ↓ | Maternal low protein diet throughout gestation and lactation causes offspring reduced adipogenesis and increased lipolysis | [ |
| 56 German Landrace gilts | Metabolic energy: 13.7 MJ/kg | Total number of myofibers ↔ | Moderate high or low maternal protein diets change gene expression but not the phenotype of skeletal muscle from porcine fetuses | [ |
| 47 pure German Landrace gilts | Metabolic energy: 13.7 ME/kg | Percentage of muscle tissue in in HP in high protein treatment ↑ | Both limited and excess protein supply retards fetal growth, but only limited protein supply impairs myogenesis, persistently restricts muscle growth potential, and favors obesity at infancy. | [ |
| 24 primiparous German Landrace sows | Metabolic energy: 13.7 ME/kg | Candidate genes of nutrient- dependent pre- and postnatal development: muscular expression of NCAPD2 (LP ↓), NCAPG (↔), NCAPH (LP ↓) | Maternal protein supply regulate condensin I subunit gene expression by methylation process and in turn may affect cell division in skeletal muscle tissue | [ |
Figure 2Effects of deficient and excess maternal protein level on fetal fiber formation. Upward-pointing arrow indicates “increase” and downward-pointing arrow indicates “decrease”.
Figure 3Effects of deficient and excess maternal protein level on neonate fat formation. Upward-pointing arrow indicates “increase” and downward-pointing arrow indicates “decrease”.