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Programming of Islet Functions in the Progeny of Hyperinsulinemic/Obese Rats

  1. Malathi Srinivasan,
  2. Ravikumar Aalinkeel,
  3. Fei Song and
  4. Mulchand S. Patel
  1. From the Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York

    Abstract

    Neonatal female rat pups that were raised artificially on a high-carbohydrate (HC) milk formula during their suckling period developed hyperinsulinemia immediately, maintained chronic hyperinsulinemia in the postweaning period on laboratory diet, and developed obesity in adulthood. Pups (second-generation HC [2-HC]) born to such female rats (first-generation HC [1-HC]) spontaneously developed chronic hyperinsulinemia and adult-onset obesity (HC phenotype) without the requirement for any dietary intervention in their suckling period. Leftward shift in the insulin secretory response to a glucose stimulus, increase in hexokinase activity, and increased preproinsulin gene transcription were observed in islets from 28-day-old 2-HC rats, and these adaptations are similar to those reported for islets from 12-day-old and 100-day-old 1-HC rats. Unlike 1-HC islets, the ability to secrete moderate amounts of insulin in the absence of glucose and calcium and the incretin input for augmentation of insulin secretion were not observed in 2-HC islets. These results show that a dietary modification in the early postnatal life of the 1-HC female rat sets up a vicious cycle of spontaneous transfer of the HC phenotype to its progeny, implicating a new component to the growing list of factors that contribute to the fetal origins of adult-onset diseases.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Mulchand. S. Patel, Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, 140 Farber Hall, 3435 Main St., Buffalo, NY 14214. E-mail: mspatel{at}buffalo.edu.

      Received for publication 13 September 2002 and accepted in revised form 23 December 2002.

      FFA, free fatty acid; GLP, glucagon-like peptide; HC, high carbohydrate; HNF3β, hepatocyte nuclear factor 3β; MF, mother fed; PDX-1, pancreatic duodenal homeobox transcription factor-1; RegIII, regenerating factor 3; SAPK2, stress-activated protein kinase 2; USF-1, upstream stimulatory factor-1.

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