Response of fetal and newborn piglets to maternal protein restriction during early or late pregnancy

Autor: W G, Pond, R R, Maurer, H J, Mersmann, S, Cummins
Rok vydání: 1992
Předmět:
Zdroj: Growth, development, and aging : GDA. 56(3)
ISSN: 1041-1232
Popis: Dietary protein restriction during pregnancy has an adverse effect on progeny development, although the importance of the time at which the nutritional insult occurs is unclear. The objective in our study was to test the hypothesis that severe protein restriction during the first trimester of swine pregnancy has a greater detrimental effect on fetal development than restriction in late pregnancy. On the day of mating, primiparous swine were assigned to control (C, 13% protein) or protein-restricted (PR, 0.5% protein) diets and fed in 4 regimens: 1) C diet throughout pregnancy (114 +/- 2 days) (n = 5), 2) PR diet to day 44, C diet to parturition (n = 6), 3) C diet to day 80, PR diet to parturition (n = 8), and 4) PR diet throughout pregnancy (n = 6). In addition, 6 pigs fed C and 7 pigs fed PR diets were killed at day 44 to assess placental and fetal development. Maternal diet had no effect on placental or fetal weight, crown-rump length, or heart girth circumference in 44-day fetuses. Mean birth weight of newborn piglets was 1462, 1291, 1262, and 1064 g for C, PR:C, C:PR, and PR groups, respectively (C greater than PR:C = C:PR greater than PR, p less than 0.01). Plasma total protein and albumin were less (p less than 0.01) in PR than in PR:C and C:PR; all three groups were less than C (p less than 0.01). Liver weight and total liver protein, RNA, and DNA followed the same pattern (C greater than PR:C = C:PR greater than PR, p less than 0.05). Longissimus muscle total protein, RNA, and DNA were greater in group C than in all other groups (p less than 0.01). Maternal protein restriction during early pregnancy produced less developmental impairment than restriction throughout pregnancy, but the magnitude of impairment was similar to that produced by restriction during only the third trimester. The effects of early restriction were manifested at birth, even though none of the indices of stunting were observed at 44 days when the maternal protein restriction was ended. Whether the effects of early versus late restriction show the same mechanism of action has not been determined.
Databáze: OpenAIRE