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Slower growth during lactation rescues early cardiovascular and adipose tissue hypertrophy induced by fetal undernutrition in rats

Author
Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Pilar; Monedero-Cobeta, Ignaciountranslated; Ramiro-Cortijo, David; Puthong, Sophida; Quintana-Villamandos, Begoña; Gil Ramírez, Aliciauntranslated; Cañas Rodríguez, Silviauntranslated; Ruvira, Santiago
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Fisiología; UAM. Departamento de Química Agrícola
Publisher
MDPI
Date
2022-10-01
Citation
10.3390/biomedicines10102504
Biomedicines 10.10 (2022): 2504
 
 
 
ISSN
2227-9059 (online)
DOI
10.3390/biomedicines10102504
Project
Gobierno de España. RTI 2018-097504-B-I00
Editor's Version
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10102504
Subjects
Nephrons; Blood Pressure; Birth Weight; Medicina; Química
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10486/706470
Rights
© 2022 by the authors

Licencia Creative Commons
Esta obra está bajo una Licencia Creative Commons Atribución 4.0 Internacional.

Abstract

Low birth weight (LBW) and accelerated growth during lactation are associated with cardiometabolic disease development. LBW offspring from rats exposed to undernutrition during gestation (MUN) develops hypertension. In this rat model, we tested if slower postnatal growth improves early cardiometabolic alterations. MUN dams were fed ad libitum during gestation days 1–10, with 50% of the daily intake during days 11–21 and ad libitum during lactation. Control dams were always fed ad libitum. Pups were maintained with their own mother or cross-fostered. Body weight and length were recorded weekly, and breastmilk was obtained. At weaning, the heart was evaluated by echocardiography, and aorta structure and adipocytes in white perivascular fat were studied by confocal microscopy (size, % beige-adipocytes by Mitotracker staining). Breastmilk protein and fat content were not significantly different between groups. Compared to controls, MUN males significantly accelerated body weight gain during the exclusive lactation period (days 1–14) while females accelerated during the last week; length growth was slower in MUN rats from both sexes. By weaning, MUN males, but not females, showed reduced diastolic function and hypertrophy in the heart, aorta, and adipocytes; the percentage of beige-type adipocytes was smaller in MUN males and females. Fostering MUN offspring on control dams significantly reduced weight gain rate, cardiovascular, and fat hypertrophy, increasing beige-adipocyte proportion. Control offspring nursed by MUN mothers reduced body growth gain, without cardiovascular modifications. In conclusion, slower growth during lactation can rescue early cardiovascular alterations induced by fetal undernutrition. Exclusive lactation was a key period, despite no modifications in breastmilk macronutrients, suggesting the role of bioactive components. Our data support that lactation is a key period to counteract cardiometabolic disease programming in LBW and a potential intervention window for the mother
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Google™ Scholar:Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Pilar - Monedero-Cobeta, Ignacio - Ramiro-Cortijo, David - Puthong, Sophida - Quintana-Villamandos, Begoña - Gil Ramírez, Alicia - Cañas Rodríguez, Silvia - Ruvira, Santiago

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  • Producción científica en acceso abierto de la UAM [16828]

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