2014-10-24T14:34:36Z
2014-10-24T14:34:36Z
2014-05
2014-10-24T14:34:36Z
Background/Aims: Moderate maternal calorie-restriction during gestation programmes offspring for a major propensity to develop metabolic alterations in adulthood. We aimed to assess whether increased hepatic fatty-acid oxidation (FAO), at early ages, by gene transfer of Cpt1am (active mutant of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1a), may be a strategy for reversing metabolic disturbances associated to maternal calorie-restriction during gestation in rats. Methods: AAV-Gfp (control) and AAV-Cpt1am vectors were administered by tail vein injection in 18-day-old control-pups and the offspring of 20% calorie-restricted rats during gestation (CR). After weaning, animals were fed with normal-fat diet. At the age of 4 months, they were moved to HF-diet and sacrificed at the age of 6 months to collect tissues. Locomotive activity, energy expenditure and blood pressure were measured. Results: Under HF-diet, CR-animals showed higher HOMA-IR, adipocyte diameter and hepatic triglyceride accumulation than controls; these alterations were reverted in Cpt1am-injected animals. In liver, this treatment ameliorated inflammatory state, decreased expression of lipogenesis-related genes and partially restored the decreased expression of leptin-receptor occurring in CR-animals. Treatment also reverted the decreased energy expenditure and the increased blood pressure of CR-animals. Conclusion: Increasing hepatic FAO through AAV-Cpt1am injection at juvenile ages prevents some metabolic disorders associated to gestational maternal calorie-restriction.
Article
Published version
English
Àcids grassos; Dieta hipocalòrica; Fetge; Teràpia genètica; Malnutrició; Complicacions en l'embaràs; Trastorns del metabolisme; Fatty acids; Low-calorie diet; Liver; Gene therapy; Malnutrition; Disorders of metabolism; Complications of pregnancy
Karger
Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000358714
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry, 2014, vol. 33, num. 5, p. 1498-1515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000358714
(c) Karger, 2014