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Glucose homeostasis and metabolic adaptation in the pregnant and lactating sheep are affected by the level of nutrition previously provided during her late fetal life.

Abstract
This study investigated whether undernutrition (UN) during late fetal life can programme the subsequent adult life adaptation of glucose homeostasis and metabolism during pregnancy and lactation. Twenty-four primiparous experimental ewes were used. Twelve had been exposed to a prenatal NORM level of nutrition (maternal diet approximately 15 MJME/d) and 12 to a LOW level of nutrition (maternal diet approximately 7 MJME/d) during the last 6 weeks pre-partum. The experimental ewes were subjected to two intravenous glucose tolerance tests (IGTT) in late gestation (one prior to (G-IGTT) and one by the end of a feed restriction period (RG-IGTT)), and a third around peak lactation (L-IGTT). LOW had lower basal insulin concentrations during lactation, and significantly decreased absolute insulin secretion during the L-IGTT in spite of similar glucose tolerance, indicating increased insulin sensitivity in LOW during lactation. There was no effect of prenatal UN on glucose tolerance during G-IGTT, however, during RG-IGTT LOW was more glucose intolerant and apparently more insulin resistant compared to NORM. In conclusion, UN during late fetal life in sheep impairs subsequent pancreatic insulin secretory capacity during adult life, and reduces plasticity of down-regulation of insulin secretion in response to a metabolic challenge. Furthermore, prenatal UN appears to programme mechanisms, which in young adult females can shift the insulin hypersensitivity observed during early lactation into an insulin resistance observed during late gestation and feed restriction. Early postnatal UN caused by lowered milk intake in early postnatal life may have contributed to these phenomena.
AuthorsS M Husted, M O Nielsen, D Blache, K L Ingvartsen
JournalDomestic animal endocrinology (Domest Anim Endocrinol) Vol. 34 Issue 4 Pg. 419-31 (May 2008) ISSN: 0739-7240 [Print] United States
PMID18289824 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Chemical References
  • Fatty Acids, Nonesterified
  • Insulin
  • Glucose
Topics
  • Adaptation, Physiological
  • Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
  • Animals
  • Animals, Newborn
  • Birth Weight (physiology)
  • Body Weight
  • Fatty Acids, Nonesterified (blood)
  • Female
  • Glucose (metabolism)
  • Glucose Tolerance Test
  • Homeostasis (physiology)
  • Insulin (blood)
  • Lactation (metabolism)
  • Milk (metabolism)
  • Pregnancy (metabolism)
  • Pregnancy, Animal
  • Prenatal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
  • Sheep (growth & development, metabolism, physiology)

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