Maternal Diet Supplementation with n-6/n-3 Essential Fatty Acids in a 1.2 : 1.0 Ratio Attenuates Metabolic Dysfunction in MSG-Induced Obese Mice.
Josiane Morais MartinRosiane Aparecida MirandaLuiz Felipe BarellaKesia Palma-RigoVander Silva AlvesGabriel Sergio FabricioAudrei PavanelloClaudinéia Conationi da Silva FrancoTatiane Aparecida RibeiroJesuí Vergílio VisentainerElton Guntendeorfer BanaféClayton Antunes MartinPaulo Cezar de Freitas MathiasJúlio Cezar de OliveiraPublished in: International journal of endocrinology (2016)
Essential polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) prevent cardiometabolic diseases. We aimed to study whether a diet supplemented with a mixture of n-6/n-3 PUFAs, during perinatal life, attenuates outcomes of long-term metabolic dysfunction in prediabetic and obese mice. Seventy-day-old virgin female mice were mated. From the conception day, dams were fed a diet supplemented with sunflower oil and flaxseed powder (containing an n-6/n-3 PUFAs ratio of 1.2 : 1.0) throughout pregnancy and lactation, while control dams received a commercial diet. Newborn mice were treated with monosodium L-glutamate (MSG, 4 mg g-1 body weight per day) for the first 5 days of age. A batch of weaned pups was sacrificed to quantify the brain and pancreas total lipids; another batch were fed a commercial diet until 90 days of age, where glucose homeostasis and glucose-induced insulin secretion (GIIS) as well as retroperitoneal fat and Lee index were assessed. MSG-treated mice developed obesity, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, pancreatic islet dysfunction, and higher fat stores. Maternal flaxseed diet-supplementation decreased n-6/n-3 PUFAs ratio in the brain and pancreas and blocked glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, GIIS impairment, and obesity development. The n-6/n-3 essential PUFAs in a ratio of 1.2 : 1.0 supplemented in maternal diet during pregnancy and lactation prevent metabolic dysfunction in MSG-obesity model.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- physical activity
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- fatty acid
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- body weight
- high fat diet
- skeletal muscle
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- weight gain
- pregnancy outcomes
- blood glucose
- birth weight
- multiple sclerosis
- resting state
- diabetic rats
- glycemic control
- functional connectivity
- human milk
- high glucose
- white matter
- preterm infants
- newly diagnosed
- body mass index