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Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs

The study objectives were to test the hypothesis that heat stress (HS) during gestational development alters postnatal growth, body composition, and biological response to HS conditions in pigs. To investigate this, 14 first parity crossbred gilts were exposed to one of four environmental treatments...

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Autores principales: Boddicker, Rebecca L., Seibert, Jacob T., Johnson, Jay S., Pearce, Sarah C., Selsby, Joshua T., Gabler, Nicholas K., Lucy, Matthew C., Safranski, Timothy J., Rhoads, Robert P., Baumgard, Lance H., Ross, Jason W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4226472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25383953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110859
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author Boddicker, Rebecca L.
Seibert, Jacob T.
Johnson, Jay S.
Pearce, Sarah C.
Selsby, Joshua T.
Gabler, Nicholas K.
Lucy, Matthew C.
Safranski, Timothy J.
Rhoads, Robert P.
Baumgard, Lance H.
Ross, Jason W.
author_facet Boddicker, Rebecca L.
Seibert, Jacob T.
Johnson, Jay S.
Pearce, Sarah C.
Selsby, Joshua T.
Gabler, Nicholas K.
Lucy, Matthew C.
Safranski, Timothy J.
Rhoads, Robert P.
Baumgard, Lance H.
Ross, Jason W.
author_sort Boddicker, Rebecca L.
collection PubMed
description The study objectives were to test the hypothesis that heat stress (HS) during gestational development alters postnatal growth, body composition, and biological response to HS conditions in pigs. To investigate this, 14 first parity crossbred gilts were exposed to one of four environmental treatments (TNTN, TNHS, HSTN, or HSHS) during gestation. TNTN and HSHS dams were exposed to thermal neutral (TN, cyclical 18–22°C) or HS conditions (cyclical 28–34°C) during the entire gestation, respectively. Dams assigned to HSTN and TNHS treatments were heat-stressed for the first or second half of gestation, respectively. Postnatal offspring were exposed to one of two thermal environments for an acute (24 h) or chronic (five weeks) duration in either constant TN (21°C) or HS (35°C) environment. Exposure to chronic HS during their growth phase resulted in decreased longissimus dorsi cross-sectional area (LDA) in offspring from HSHS and HSTN treated dams whereas LDA was larger in offspring from dams in TNTN and TNHS conditions. Irrespective of HS during prepubertal postnatal growth, pigs from dams that experienced HS during the first half of gestation (HSHS and HSTN) had increased (13.9%) subcutaneous fat thickness compared to pigs from dams exposed to TN conditions during the first half of gestation. This metabolic repartitioning towards increased fat deposition in pigs from dams heat-stressed during the first half of gestation was accompanied by elevated blood insulin concentrations (33%; P = 0.01). Together, these results demonstrate HS during the first half of gestation altered metabolic and body composition parameters during future development and in biological responses to a subsequent HS challenge.
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spelling pubmed-42264722014-11-13 Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs Boddicker, Rebecca L. Seibert, Jacob T. Johnson, Jay S. Pearce, Sarah C. Selsby, Joshua T. Gabler, Nicholas K. Lucy, Matthew C. Safranski, Timothy J. Rhoads, Robert P. Baumgard, Lance H. Ross, Jason W. PLoS One Research Article The study objectives were to test the hypothesis that heat stress (HS) during gestational development alters postnatal growth, body composition, and biological response to HS conditions in pigs. To investigate this, 14 first parity crossbred gilts were exposed to one of four environmental treatments (TNTN, TNHS, HSTN, or HSHS) during gestation. TNTN and HSHS dams were exposed to thermal neutral (TN, cyclical 18–22°C) or HS conditions (cyclical 28–34°C) during the entire gestation, respectively. Dams assigned to HSTN and TNHS treatments were heat-stressed for the first or second half of gestation, respectively. Postnatal offspring were exposed to one of two thermal environments for an acute (24 h) or chronic (five weeks) duration in either constant TN (21°C) or HS (35°C) environment. Exposure to chronic HS during their growth phase resulted in decreased longissimus dorsi cross-sectional area (LDA) in offspring from HSHS and HSTN treated dams whereas LDA was larger in offspring from dams in TNTN and TNHS conditions. Irrespective of HS during prepubertal postnatal growth, pigs from dams that experienced HS during the first half of gestation (HSHS and HSTN) had increased (13.9%) subcutaneous fat thickness compared to pigs from dams exposed to TN conditions during the first half of gestation. This metabolic repartitioning towards increased fat deposition in pigs from dams heat-stressed during the first half of gestation was accompanied by elevated blood insulin concentrations (33%; P = 0.01). Together, these results demonstrate HS during the first half of gestation altered metabolic and body composition parameters during future development and in biological responses to a subsequent HS challenge. Public Library of Science 2014-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4226472/ /pubmed/25383953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110859 Text en © 2014 Boddicker et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Boddicker, Rebecca L.
Seibert, Jacob T.
Johnson, Jay S.
Pearce, Sarah C.
Selsby, Joshua T.
Gabler, Nicholas K.
Lucy, Matthew C.
Safranski, Timothy J.
Rhoads, Robert P.
Baumgard, Lance H.
Ross, Jason W.
Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title_full Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title_fullStr Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title_full_unstemmed Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title_short Gestational Heat Stress Alters Postnatal Offspring Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Parameters in Pigs
title_sort gestational heat stress alters postnatal offspring body composition indices and metabolic parameters in pigs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4226472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25383953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110859
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