4.6 Article

Chronic Parenteral Nutrition Induces Hepatic Inflammation, Steatosis, and Insulin Resistance in Neonatal Pigs

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 140, Issue 12, Pages 2193-2200

Publisher

AMER SOC NUTRITION-ASN
DOI: 10.3945/jn.110.125799

Keywords

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Funding

  1. USDA [58-6250-6-001]
  2. Texas Medical Center Digestive Diseases Center (NIH) [P30 DK-56338]
  3. NIH [K12HD043397, RHD059142]

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Prematurity and overfeeding in infants are associated with insulin resistance in childhood and may increase the risk of adult disease Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is a major source of infant nutritional support and may influence neonatal metabolic function Our aim was to test the hypothesis that TPN induces increased adiposity and insulin resistance compared with enteral nutrition (EN) in neonatal pigs Neonatal pigs were either fed enteral formula orally or I v administered a TPN mixture for 17 d macronutrient intake was similar in both groups During the 17-d period we measured body composition by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry scanning fasting i v glucose tolerance tests (IVG-11) and hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps (CLAMP) were performed to quantify insulin resistance On d 17 tissue was collected after 1-h low-dose CLAMP for tissue insulin signaling assays TPN pigs gained less lean and more body fat and developed hepatic steatosis compared with EN pigs After 7 and 13 d IVGTT showed evidence of insulin resistance in the TPN compared with the EN group Fasting plasma glucose and insulin also were higher in TPN pigs CLAMP showed that insulin sensitivity was markedly lower in TPN pigs than in EN pigs TPN also reduced the abundance of the insulin receptor insulin receptor substrate 1 and phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase in skeletal muscle and liver and the proliferation of total pancreatic cells and beta-cells Hepatic proinflammatory genes as well as c-Jun-N terminal kinase 1 phosphorylation plasma interleukin 6 and tumor necrosis factor-a were all higher in TPN pigs than in EN pigs The results demonstrate that chronic TPN induces a hepatic inflammatory response that is associated with significant insulin resistance hepatic steatosis and fat deposition compared with EN in neonatal pigs Further studies are warranted to establish the mechanism of TPN-induced insulin resistance and hepatic metabolic dysfunction and whether there are persistent metabolic consequences of this lifesaving form of infant nutritional support J Nutr 140 2193-2200 2010

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