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Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats

BACKGROUND: The occurrence of cancer during pregnancy merges two complex, poorly understood metabolic and hormonal conditions. This association can exacerbate the conditions of both the mother and the foetus. The branched-chain amino acid leucine enhances cellular activity, particularly by increasin...

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Autores principales: Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes, da Silva, Priscila Cristina, Tomasin, Rebeka, Oliveira, Andre Gustavo, Viana, Lais Rosa, Salomao, Emilianne Miguel, Gomes-Marcondes, Maria Cristina Cintra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4743202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26847205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2103-x
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author Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes
da Silva, Priscila Cristina
Tomasin, Rebeka
Oliveira, Andre Gustavo
Viana, Lais Rosa
Salomao, Emilianne Miguel
Gomes-Marcondes, Maria Cristina Cintra
author_facet Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes
da Silva, Priscila Cristina
Tomasin, Rebeka
Oliveira, Andre Gustavo
Viana, Lais Rosa
Salomao, Emilianne Miguel
Gomes-Marcondes, Maria Cristina Cintra
author_sort Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The occurrence of cancer during pregnancy merges two complex, poorly understood metabolic and hormonal conditions. This association can exacerbate the conditions of both the mother and the foetus. The branched-chain amino acid leucine enhances cellular activity, particularly by increasing protein synthesis. This study aimed to analyse the modulatory effect of a leucine-rich diet on direct and indirect tumour-induced placental damage. This was accomplished by evaluating the expression of genes involved in protein synthesis and degradation and assessing anti-oxidant enzyme activity in placental tissues collected from pregnant, tumour-bearing rats. RESULTS: Pregnant rats were either implanted with Walker 256 tumour cells or injected with ascitic fluid (to study the indirect effects of tumour growth) and then fed a leucine-rich diet. Animals in a control group underwent the same procedures but were fed a normal diet. On the 20(th) day of pregnancy, tumour growth was observed. Dams fed a normoprotein diet showed the greatest tumour growth. Injection with ascitic fluid mimicked the effects of tumour growth. Decreased placental protein synthesis and increased protein degradation were observed in both the tumour-bearing and the ascitic fluid-injected groups that were fed a normoprotein diet. These effects resulted in low placental DNA and protein content and high lipid peroxidation (measured by malondialdehyde content). Decreased placental protein synthesis-related gene expression was observed in the tumour group concomitant with increased expression of genes encoding protein degradation-associated proteins and proteolytic subunits. CONCLUSIONS: Consumption of a leucine-rich diet counteracted the effects produced by tumour growth and injection with ascitic fluid. The diet enhanced cell signalling, ameliorated deficiencies in DNA and protein content, and balanced protein synthesis and degradation processes in the placenta. The improvements in cell signalling included changes in the mTOR/eIF pathway. In conclusion, consumption of a leucine-rich diet improved placental metabolism and cell signalling in tumour-bearing rats, and these changes reduced the deleterious effects caused by tumour growth.
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spelling pubmed-47432022016-02-06 Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes da Silva, Priscila Cristina Tomasin, Rebeka Oliveira, Andre Gustavo Viana, Lais Rosa Salomao, Emilianne Miguel Gomes-Marcondes, Maria Cristina Cintra BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: The occurrence of cancer during pregnancy merges two complex, poorly understood metabolic and hormonal conditions. This association can exacerbate the conditions of both the mother and the foetus. The branched-chain amino acid leucine enhances cellular activity, particularly by increasing protein synthesis. This study aimed to analyse the modulatory effect of a leucine-rich diet on direct and indirect tumour-induced placental damage. This was accomplished by evaluating the expression of genes involved in protein synthesis and degradation and assessing anti-oxidant enzyme activity in placental tissues collected from pregnant, tumour-bearing rats. RESULTS: Pregnant rats were either implanted with Walker 256 tumour cells or injected with ascitic fluid (to study the indirect effects of tumour growth) and then fed a leucine-rich diet. Animals in a control group underwent the same procedures but were fed a normal diet. On the 20(th) day of pregnancy, tumour growth was observed. Dams fed a normoprotein diet showed the greatest tumour growth. Injection with ascitic fluid mimicked the effects of tumour growth. Decreased placental protein synthesis and increased protein degradation were observed in both the tumour-bearing and the ascitic fluid-injected groups that were fed a normoprotein diet. These effects resulted in low placental DNA and protein content and high lipid peroxidation (measured by malondialdehyde content). Decreased placental protein synthesis-related gene expression was observed in the tumour group concomitant with increased expression of genes encoding protein degradation-associated proteins and proteolytic subunits. CONCLUSIONS: Consumption of a leucine-rich diet counteracted the effects produced by tumour growth and injection with ascitic fluid. The diet enhanced cell signalling, ameliorated deficiencies in DNA and protein content, and balanced protein synthesis and degradation processes in the placenta. The improvements in cell signalling included changes in the mTOR/eIF pathway. In conclusion, consumption of a leucine-rich diet improved placental metabolism and cell signalling in tumour-bearing rats, and these changes reduced the deleterious effects caused by tumour growth. BioMed Central 2016-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4743202/ /pubmed/26847205 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2103-x Text en © Cruz et al. 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cruz, Bread Leandro Gomes
da Silva, Priscila Cristina
Tomasin, Rebeka
Oliveira, Andre Gustavo
Viana, Lais Rosa
Salomao, Emilianne Miguel
Gomes-Marcondes, Maria Cristina Cintra
Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title_full Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title_fullStr Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title_full_unstemmed Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title_short Dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
title_sort dietary leucine supplementation minimises tumour-induced damage in placental tissues of pregnant, tumour-bearing rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4743202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26847205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2103-x
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