1. Maternal treatment with oleoyl-estrone induces resistance to lipid accrual in their descendants.
- Author
-
García-Peláez B, Vilà R, and Remesar X
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Dietary Fats administration & dosage, Eating drug effects, Estrone administration & dosage, Estrone metabolism, Female, Lipid Metabolism drug effects, Male, Obesity metabolism, Obesity physiopathology, Obesity prevention & control, Oleic Acids metabolism, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Time Factors, Aging, Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Caloric Restriction, Dietary Fats metabolism, Estrone analogs & derivatives, Lactation metabolism, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Milk metabolism, Oleic Acids administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objective: To determine whether treatment of rat dams with oleoyl-estrone (OE) has an effect on the offspring's long-term response to diet restriction during lactation., Methods and Procedures: Control, OE-treated, and diet-restricted dams were treated up to day 15 of lactation. Changes in food intake and body weight were recorded for dams and their pups. After weaning, pups received a 4-week standard diet followed by a 4-week period of high-fat diet. Lipid, protein, and energy content of pups plus energy intake and efficiency. Serum metabolites (glucose, urea, and cholesterol) and serum hormones (adiponectin, leptin, insulin, and sexual hormones)., Results: Neither pups from dams in the OE-treated nor in the diet-restricted group showed significant changes in weight, though these two groups ingested 79% of food ingested by controls. At weaning, the pups from OE-treated rats were smaller than those of the control or diet-restricted groups. These pups maintained the differences in size and lipid content during the 4-week standard-diet period, whereas pups from diet-restricted dams showed a sharp decrease in their lipid content. During the 4 weeks of high-fat diet, the male offspring from OE-treated dams increased the difference in lipid content in relation to the pups from control dams whereas in females the differences decreased. Female offspring from diet-restricted dams showed the most marked changes in metabolite and hormone levels in relation to controls., Discussion: Treatment of lactating dams with OE programs the metabolic response of their offspring to resist the challenge of a high-fat diet that would lead to obesity in adulthood.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF