• Title of article

    Fructose during pregnancy affects maternal and fetal leptin signaling

  • Author/Authors

    Lourdes Rodr?guez، نويسنده , , Mar?a I. Panadero، نويسنده , , N?ria Roglans، نويسنده , , Paola Otero، نويسنده , , Juan J. ?lvarez-Mill?n، نويسنده , , Juan C. Laguna، نويسنده , , Carlos Bocos، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    1709
  • To page
    1716
  • Abstract
    Fructose intake from added sugars correlates with the epidemic rise in obesity, metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular diseases. Fructose intake also causes features of metabolic syndrome in laboratory animals. Therefore, we have investigated whether fructose modifies lipidemia in pregnant rats and produces changes in their fetuses. Thus, fructose administration (10% wt/vol.) in the drinking water of rats throughout gestation leads to maternal hypertriglyceridemia. This change was not observed in glucose-fed rats, although both carbohydrates produced similar changes in liver triglycerides and in the expression of transcription factors and enzymes involved in lipogenesis. After fasting overnight, mothers fed with carbohydrates were found to be hyperleptinemic. However, after a bolus of glucose, leptinemia in fructose-fed mothers showed no response, whereas it increased in parallel in glucose-fed and control mothers. Fetuses from fructose-fed mothers showed hypotriglyceridemia and a higher hepatic triglyceride content than fetuses from control or glucose-fed mothers. A higher expression of genes related to lipogenesis and a lower expression of fatty acid catabolism genes were also found in fetuses from fructose-fed mothers. Moreover, although hyperleptinemic, these fetuses exhibited increased tyrosine phosphorylation of the signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT-3) protein, without a parallel increase in the serine phosphorylation of STAT-3 nor in the suppressor of cytokine signaling-3 protein levels whose expression is regulated by leptin through STAT-3 activation. Thus, fructose intake during gestation provoked a diminished maternal leptin response to fasting and refeeding and an impairment in the transduction of the leptin signal in the fetuses, which could be responsible for their hepatic steatosis.
  • Keywords
    Fructose , Leptin , rat , Pregnancy , Triglycerides
  • Journal title
    The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
  • Record number

    1300290