Life-long Maternal Cafeteria Diet Promotes Tissue-Specific Morphological Changes in Male Offspring Adult Rats



Título del documento: Life-long Maternal Cafeteria Diet Promotes Tissue-Specific Morphological Changes in Male Offspring Adult Rats
Revue: Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias
Base de datos: PERIÓDICA
Número de sistema: 000417684
ISSN: 0001-3765
Autores: 1
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Instituciones: 1Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Parana, Centro de Ciencias Biologicas e da Saude, Cascavel, Parana. Brasil
2Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Parana, Centro de Ciencias Medicas e Farmaceuticas, Cascavel, Parana. Brasil
Año:
Periodo: Dic
Volumen: 89
Número: 4
Paginación: 2887-2900
País: Brasil
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de documento: Artículo
Enfoque: Experimental, aplicado
Resumen en inglés Here, we evaluated whether the exposure of rats to a cafeteria diet pre- and/or post-weaning, alters histological characteristics in the White Adipose Tissue (WAT), Brown Adipose Tissue (BAT), and liver of adult male offspring. Female Wistar rats were divided into Control (CTL; fed on standard rodent chow) and Cafeteria (CAF; fed with the cafeteria diet throughout life, including pregnancy and lactation). After birth, only male offspring (F1) were maintained and received the CTL or CAF diets; originating four experimental groups: CTL-CTLF1; CTL-CAFF1; CAF-CTLF1; CAF-CAFF1. Data of biometrics, metabolic parameters, liver, BAT and WAT histology were assessed and integrated using the Principal Component Analysis (PCA). According to PCA analysis worse metabolic and biometric characteristics in adulthood are associated with the post-weaning CAF diet compared to pre and post weaning CAF diet. Thus, the CTL-CAFF1 group showed obesity, higher deposition of fat in the liver and BAT and high fasting plasma levels of glucose, triglycerides and cholesterol. Interestingly, the association between pre and post-weaning CAF diet attenuated the obesity and improved the plasma levels of glucose and triglycerides compared to CTL-CAFF1 without avoiding the higher lipid accumulation in BAT and in liver, suggesting that the impact of maternal CAF diet is tissue-specific
Disciplinas: Medicina
Palabras clave: Medicina experimental,
Metabolismo y nutrición,
Obesidad,
Experimentos de alimentación,
Tejido adiposo,
Análisis histológico,
Ratas,
Descendencia
Keyword: Experimental medicine,
Metabolism and nutrition,
Obesity,
Feeding experiments,
Adipose tissue,
Histological analysis,
Rats,
Offspring
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