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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Protein-Energy Malnutrition during Gestation and Lactation in Rats Affects Growth Rate, Brain Development and Essential Fatty Acid Metabolism

M C Marín, +3 more
- 01 Apr 1995 - 
- Vol. 125, Iss: 4, pp 1017-1024
TLDR
The results demonstrate the widespread and profound deleterious effects of low protein levels of maternal diet on the growth rate, brain development and fatty acid metabolism in rat pups.
Abstract
The influence of feeding a low protein diet to rat dams during gestation and lactation on lipid metabolism in pups was studied. Wistar rats were fed 5, 10, 15 and 25% dietary protein during gestation and lactation. Pup growth was monitored until weaning, and brain weight, protein concentration, proteolipid concentration and total lipid phosphorus concentration of brain were analyzed. The levels of fatty acids in dam milk as well as in pup liver phospholipids and brain prosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine were determined. The progressive deprivation of maternal dietary protein produced a reduction in the total saturated fatty acid concentration of dam milk and an increment in the concentration of nonmetabolized linoleic acid. Pup body and brain weights as well as proteolipid, protein and total lipid phosphorus concentrations in brain were reduced in proportion to the degree of dietary protein deficiency. The products:precursor ratio of (n-6) fatty acids in liver phospholipids revealed an impairment in the elongation-desaturation pathway due to maternal protein deficiency. Both (n-6) and (n-3) polyunsaturated fatty acids within brain phosphatidylethanolamine were decreased by reduced maternal dietary protein intake, whereas only the linoleic acid-derived products were similarly affected in the corresponding phosphatidylcholine fraction. These results demonstrate the widespread and profound deleterious effects of low protein levels of maternal diet on the growth rate, brain development and fatty acid metabolism in rat pups.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hypothalamic Nuclei Are Malformed in Weanling Offspring of Low Protein Malnourished Rat Dams

TL;DR: Investigation of effects of a low protein diet during gestation and lactation in rat dams on the organization of hypothalamic regulators of body weight and metabolism in the offspring at weaning suggests that perinatal malnutrition and growth retardation at birth are risk factors for diabetic and cardiovascular disturbances in later life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels in weaning offspring of low-protein malnourished mother rats.

TL;DR: Observations indicate a leptin-independent stimulation of the orexigenic ARC-PVN axis in undernourished LP rats at weaning and a disturbed NPYergic regulation of the VMN is suggested, possibly contributing to alterations of the hypothalamic regulation of body weight and metabolism in LP offspring during life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of dietary supplementation of n-3 fatty acids and elevated concentrations of dietary protein on the performance of sows.

TL;DR: O3FA alone during lactation improved the growth of nursing piglets, regardless of parity, and the O3FA diet, with or without elevated protein, did not affect first-parity gestation performance, although O3 FA alone may have improved piglet birth weight in the subsequent litter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrition and neurodevelopment: mechanisms of developmental dysfunction and disease in later life.

TL;DR: A major aim of future research should be to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying nutritionally-induced impairment of neurodevelopment and specifically to determine the mechanisms by which early nutritional experience affects later cognitive performance.
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