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Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction

We investigated if whether intrauterine protein restriction in combination with overfeeding during lactation would cause adult-onset obesity and metabolic disorders. After birth, litters from dams fed with control (17% protein) and low protein (6% protein) diets were adjusted to a size of four (CO a...

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Autores principales: Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti, Coutinho, Felipe Rodrigues, Faiad, Jaline Zandonato, Taki, Marina Satie, de Lima Reis, Silvia Regina, Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Martins, Paiva, Adriene Alexandra, Latorraca, Márcia Queiroz, Gomes-da-Silva, Maria Helena Gaíva, Martins, Maria Salete Ferreira
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3574039/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23305533
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-10-5
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author Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti
Coutinho, Felipe Rodrigues
Faiad, Jaline Zandonato
Taki, Marina Satie
de Lima Reis, Silvia Regina
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Martins
Paiva, Adriene Alexandra
Latorraca, Márcia Queiroz
Gomes-da-Silva, Maria Helena Gaíva
Martins, Maria Salete Ferreira
author_facet Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti
Coutinho, Felipe Rodrigues
Faiad, Jaline Zandonato
Taki, Marina Satie
de Lima Reis, Silvia Regina
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Martins
Paiva, Adriene Alexandra
Latorraca, Márcia Queiroz
Gomes-da-Silva, Maria Helena Gaíva
Martins, Maria Salete Ferreira
author_sort Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti
collection PubMed
description We investigated if whether intrauterine protein restriction in combination with overfeeding during lactation would cause adult-onset obesity and metabolic disorders. After birth, litters from dams fed with control (17% protein) and low protein (6% protein) diets were adjusted to a size of four (CO and LO groups, respectively) or eight (CC and LC groups, respectively) pups. All of the offspring were fed a diet containing 12% protein from the time of weaning until they were 90 d old. Compared to the CC and LC groups, the CO and LO groups had higher relative and absolute food intakes, oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production; lower brown adipose tissue weight and lipid content and greater weight gain and absolute and relative white adipose tissue weight and absolute lipid content. Compared with the CO and CC rats, the LC and LO rats exhibited higher relative food intake, brown adipose tissue weight and lipid content, reduced oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production and spontaneous activity, increased relative retroperitoneal adipose tissue weight and unaltered absolute white adipose tissue weight and lipid content. The fasting serum glucose was similar among the groups. The area under the glucose curve was higher in the LO and CO rats than in the LC and CC rats. The basal insulinemia and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were lower in the LO group than in the other groups. The total area under the insulin curve for the LO rats was similar to the CC rats, and both were lower than the CO and LC rats. K(itt) was higher in the LO, LC and CO groups than in the CC group. Thus, intrauterine protein restriction followed by overfeeding during lactation did not induce obesity, but produced glucose intolerance by impairing pancreatic function in adulthood.
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spelling pubmed-35740392013-02-20 Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti Coutinho, Felipe Rodrigues Faiad, Jaline Zandonato Taki, Marina Satie de Lima Reis, Silvia Regina Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Martins Paiva, Adriene Alexandra Latorraca, Márcia Queiroz Gomes-da-Silva, Maria Helena Gaíva Martins, Maria Salete Ferreira Nutr Metab (Lond) Research We investigated if whether intrauterine protein restriction in combination with overfeeding during lactation would cause adult-onset obesity and metabolic disorders. After birth, litters from dams fed with control (17% protein) and low protein (6% protein) diets were adjusted to a size of four (CO and LO groups, respectively) or eight (CC and LC groups, respectively) pups. All of the offspring were fed a diet containing 12% protein from the time of weaning until they were 90 d old. Compared to the CC and LC groups, the CO and LO groups had higher relative and absolute food intakes, oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production; lower brown adipose tissue weight and lipid content and greater weight gain and absolute and relative white adipose tissue weight and absolute lipid content. Compared with the CO and CC rats, the LC and LO rats exhibited higher relative food intake, brown adipose tissue weight and lipid content, reduced oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production and spontaneous activity, increased relative retroperitoneal adipose tissue weight and unaltered absolute white adipose tissue weight and lipid content. The fasting serum glucose was similar among the groups. The area under the glucose curve was higher in the LO and CO rats than in the LC and CC rats. The basal insulinemia and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were lower in the LO group than in the other groups. The total area under the insulin curve for the LO rats was similar to the CC rats, and both were lower than the CO and LC rats. K(itt) was higher in the LO, LC and CO groups than in the CC group. Thus, intrauterine protein restriction followed by overfeeding during lactation did not induce obesity, but produced glucose intolerance by impairing pancreatic function in adulthood. BioMed Central 2013-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3574039/ /pubmed/23305533 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-10-5 Text en Copyright ©2013 Coutinho et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Coutinho, Grazielle Vitória Ponti
Coutinho, Felipe Rodrigues
Faiad, Jaline Zandonato
Taki, Marina Satie
de Lima Reis, Silvia Regina
Ignácio-Souza, Letícia Martins
Paiva, Adriene Alexandra
Latorraca, Márcia Queiroz
Gomes-da-Silva, Maria Helena Gaíva
Martins, Maria Salete Ferreira
Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title_full Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title_fullStr Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title_full_unstemmed Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title_short Intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
title_sort intrauterine protein restriction combined with early postnatal overfeeding was not associated with adult-onset obesity but produced glucose intolerance by pancreatic dysfunction
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3574039/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23305533
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-10-5
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