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Oxidative injuries induced by maternal low-protein diet in female brainstem

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Many studies have shown that a maternal low-protein diet increases the susceptibility of offspring to cardiovascular disease in later-life. Moreover, a lower incidence of cardiovascular disease in females than in… Click to show full abstract

Many studies have shown that a maternal low-protein diet increases the susceptibility of offspring to cardiovascular disease in later-life. Moreover, a lower incidence of cardiovascular disease in females than in males is understood to be largely due to the protective effect of high levels of estrogens throughout a woman's reproductive life. However, to our knowledge, the role of estradiol in moderating the later-life susceptibility of offspring of nutrient-deprived mothers to cardiovascular disease is not fully understood. The present study is aimed at investigating whether oxidative stress in the brainstem caused by a maternal low-protein diet administered during a critical period of fetal/neonatal brain development (i.e during gestation and lactation) is affected by estradiol levels. Female Wistar rat offspring were divided into four groups according to their mothers’ diets and to the serum estradiol levels of the offspring at the time of testing: (1) 22 days of age/control diet: (2) 22 days of age/low-protein diet; (3) 122 days of age/control diet: (4) 122 days of age/low-protein diet. Undernutrition in the context of low serum estradiol compared to undernutrition in a higher estradiol context resulted in increased levels of oxidative stress biomarkers and a reduction in enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidant defenses. Total global oxy-score showed oxidative damage in 22-day-old rats whose mothers had received a low-protein diet. In the 122-day-old group, we observed a decrease in oxidative stress biomarkers, increased enzymatic antioxidant activity, and a positive oxy-score when compared to control. We conclude from these results that following a protein deficiency in the maternal diet during early development of the offspring, estrogens present at high levels at reproductive age may confer resistance to the oxidative damage in the brainstem that is very apparent in pre-pubertal rats.

Keywords: maternal low; age; low protein; protein diet; brainstem

Journal Title: Nutritional Neuroscience
Year Published: 2018

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