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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 292: E1702-E1714, 2007. First published February 13, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpendo.00605.2006
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Prenatal exposure to a low-protein diet programs disordered regulation of lipid metabolism in the aging rat

Aml Erhuma,1 Andrew M. Salter,2 Dean V. Sculley,2 Simon C. Langley-Evans,2 and Andrew J. Bennett1

1School of Biomedical Science, University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham; and 2School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington, Loughborough, United Kingdom

Submitted 13 November 2006 ; accepted in final form 8 February 2007

The nutritional environment encountered during fetal life is strongly implicated as a determinant of lifelong metabolic capacity and risk of disease. Pregnant rats were fed a control or low-protein (LP) diet, targeted to early (LPE), mid-(LPM), or late (LPL) pregnancy, or throughout gestation (LPA). The offspring were studied at 1, 9, and 18 mo of age. All LP-exposed groups had similar plasma triglyceride, cholesterol, glucose, and insulin concentrations to those of controls at 1 and 9 mo of age, but by 18 mo there was evidence of LP-programmed hypertriglyceridemia and insulin resistance. All LP-exposed groups exhibited histological evidence of hepatic steatosis and were found to have two- to threefold more hepatic triglyceride than control animals. These phenotypic changes were accompanied by age-related changes in mRNA and protein expression of the transcription factors SREBP-1c, ChREBP, PPAR{gamma}, and PPAR{alpha} and their respective downstream target genes ACC1, FAS, L-PK, and MCAD. At 9 mo of age, the LP groups exhibited suppression of the SREBP-1c-related lipogenic pathway but between 9 and 18 mo underwent a switch to increased lipogenic capacity with a lower expression of PPAR{gamma} and MCAD, consistent with reduced lipid oxidation. The findings indicate that prenatal protein restriction programs development of a metabolic syndrome-like phenotype that develops only with senescence. The data implicate altered expression of SREBP-1c and ChREBP as key mediators of the programmed phenotype, but the basis of the switch in metabolic status that occurred between 9 and 18 mo of age is, as yet, unidentified.

pregnancy; lipids; transcription factors; insulin resistance; metabolic syndrome



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: S. C. Langley-Evans, School of Biosciences, Univ. of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington, Loughborough, UK (e-mail: Simon.Langley-Evans{at}nottingham.ac.uk)




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