4.7 Article

An early fish oil-enriched diet reverses biochemical, liver and adipose tissue alterations in male offspring from maternal protein restriction in mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 1009-1014

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2010.08.013

Keywords

Fish oil; Protein restriction; Fatty liver; Obesity; Hypertension; Insulin resistance

Funding

  1. EMBRAPA
  2. CNPq (Brazilian Council of Science and Technology)
  3. FAPERJ (Rio de Janeiro State Foundation for Scientific Research)

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Fetal programming is linked to adulthood metabolic and chronic diseases. We hypothesized that early fish oil (FO) intake would revert the programming responses in adult offspring. Pregnant mice were fed either standard chow (SC) or a low-protein diet (LP) throughout pregnancy/lactation. At weaning, the following groups were formed: SC and SC-FO, LP and LP-FO, which were fed SC or SC+FO, respectively. The LP offspring are predisposed to becoming fat, hypercholesterolemic and hyperglycemic. In addition, during adulthood, they become hypertensive with hepatic steatosis and have a high level of sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP-1). However, LP offspring that were fed an FO-enriched diet have decreased body mass (BM) gain and lower final BM. In addition, with this diet, these mice have improved lipid metabolism with a decrease in total cholesterol (TC) and triacylglyceride (TG) levels, reduced fat pad masses and reduced adipocyte size. Furthermore, these LP offspring show reduced liver structural damage of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), liver steatosis with low SREBP-1 protein expression and high peroxisome proliferator activity receptor-alpha expression, and improvement of blood pressure (BP) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha level. Early fish oil intake has beneficial effects on the programming responses that control body fat pad, glucose and lipid metabolism, and liver and adipose tissue structure in adult programmed offspring. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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