| Literature DB >> 35360679 |
Yingga Wu1,2,3, Sumei Hu1,4, Dengbao Yang1, Li Li1,2, Baoguo Li1,2, Lu Wang1,2,3, Min Li1,2,3,5, Guanlin Wang1,2,3, Jianbo Li6, Yanchao Xu1, Xueying Zhang1,2,3,5, Chaoqun Niu1,5, John R Speakman1,3,5,7.
Abstract
A variety of inbred mouse strains have been used for research in metabolic disorders. Despite being inbred, they display large inter-individual variability for many traits like food intake and body weight. However, the relationship between dietary macronutrients and inter-individual variation in body weight and food intake of different mouse strains is still unclear. We investigated the association between macronutrient content of the diet and variations in food intake, body composition, and glucose tolerance by exposing five different mouse strains (C57BL/6, BALB/c, C3H, DBA/2, and FVB) to 24 different diets with variable protein, fat, and carbohydrate contents. We found only increasing dietary fat, but not protein or carbohydrate had a significant association (positive) with variation in both food intake and body weight. The highest variation in both body weight and food intake occurred with 50% dietary fat. However, there were no significant relationships between the variation in fat and lean mass with dietary protein, fat, or carbohydrate levels. In addition, none of the dietary macronutrients had significant impacts on the variation in glucose tolerance ability in C57BL/6 mice. In conclusion, the variations in food intake and body weight changes increased with the elevation of dietary fat levels.Entities:
Keywords: carbohydrate; fat; mice; protein; strain; variation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35360679 PMCID: PMC8963818 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2022.835536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Summary of experiments performed.
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| Experiment 1: manipulation of dietary protein levels under fixed fat contents | a. Two series of 6 diets with varying protein level |
| Experiment 2: manipulation of dietary fat levels under fixed protein contents | a. Two series of 6 diets with varying fat level (10% to |
Figure 1The diagram showing the relationship between dietary macronutrient content and the coefficient of variation (CV) of body weight and food intake. The correlations between logged dietary fat, protein, and carbohydrate contents and (A–C) logged CV of body weight and (D–F) food intake of the last week (10th week) at different diet treatment periods, respectively (n = 7–21).
Figure 2The coefficient of variation (CV) of body weight and food intake of different strains and different diet treatment groups. The CV of body weight and food intake of (A,B) graded levels of fat content diet treatment group, (C,D) different strains (n = 7–21). (E–I) Variations in body weight gain (CV) of five different strains (C57BL/6, BALB/c, C3H, DBA/2, and FVB) when fed with 10, 30, 40, 50, 70, and 80% content fat diets, respectively (n = 7–21).
Figure 3The diagram showing the relationship between dietary macronutrient content and the coefficient of variation (CV) of fat mass and lean mass. The correlations between logged dietary fat, protein, and carbohydrate contents and (A–C) logged CV of fat mass and (D–F) lean mass of the last week (10th week) at different diet treatment periods, respectively (n = 7–21).
Figure 4The diagram showing the relationship between dietary macronutrient content and coefficient of variation (CV) of body weight of the 1st week and 4th week after exposure to different diets. The correlations between logged dietary fat, protein, and carbohydrate contents and (A–C) logged CV of body weight of the 1st week and (D–F) 4th week at different diet treatment periods, respectively (n = 7–21).
Figure 5The diagram showing the relationship between dietary macronutrient content and coefficient of variation (CV) of food intake of the 1st week and 4th week after exposure to different diets. The correlations between logged dietary fat, protein, and carbohydrate contents and (A–C) logged CV of food intake of the 1st week and (D–F) 4th week at different diet treatment periods, respectively (n = 7–21).
Figure 6The diagram showing the relationship between dietary macronutrient content and coefficient of variation (CV) of fasting glucose and area under the curve (AUC) of C57BL/6 mice after exposure to different diets. The correlations between logged dietary fat, protein, and carbohydrate contents and (A–C) logged CV of fasting glucose and (D–F) AUC of last week at different diet treatment periods, respectively (n = 10–11).