Fetal programming of fat and collagen in porcine skeletal muscles

被引:59
作者
Karunaratne, JF [1 ]
Ashton, CJ [1 ]
Stickland, NC [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London Royal Vet Coll, Dept Vet Basic Sci, London NW1 0TU, England
关键词
connective tissue; fetal origins; M; semitendinosus; myofibres; porcine;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-7580.2005.00494.x
中图分类号
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学]; R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号
100101 ;
摘要
Connective tissue plays a key role in the scaffolding and development of skeletal muscle. Pilot studies carried out in our laboratory have shown that the smallest porcine littermate has a higher content of connective tissue within skeletal muscle compared with its largest littermate. The present study investigated the prenatal development of intralitter variation in terms of collagen content within connective tissue and intramuscular fat of the M. semitendinosus. Twenty-three pairs of porcine fetuses from a Large White-Landrace origin were used aged from 36 to 86 days of gestation. The largest and smallest littermates were chosen by weight and the M. semitendinosus was removed from each. Complete transverse muscle sections were stained with Oil Red O (detection of lipids) and immunocytochemistry was performed using an antibody to collagen I. Slides were analysed and paired t-Tests revealed the smallest littermate contained a significantly higher proportion of fat deposits and collagen I content compared with the largest littermate. Recent postnatal studies showing elevated levels of intramuscular lipids and low scores for meat tenderness in the smallest littermate corroborate our investigations. It can be concluded that the differences seen in connective tissue elements have a fetal origin that may continue postnatally.
引用
收藏
页码:763 / 768
页数:6
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]   Collagen cross-linking in porcine M-longissimus lumborum: Absence of a relationship with variation in texture at pork weight [J].
Avery, NC ;
Sims, TJ ;
Warkup, C ;
Bailey, AJ .
MEAT SCIENCE, 1996, 42 (03) :355-369
[2]   Maternal endocrine adaptation throughout pregnancy to nutritional manipulation: Consequences for maternal plasma leptin and cortisol and the programming of fetal adipose tissue development [J].
Bispham, J ;
Gopalakrishnan, GS ;
Dandrea, J ;
Wilson, V ;
Budge, H ;
Keisler, DH ;
Pipkin, FB ;
Stephenson, T ;
Symonds, ME .
ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2003, 144 (08) :3575-3585
[3]  
BISPHAM J, 2005, IN PRESS ENDOCRINOLO
[4]  
CLELLAND A, 2001, THESIS U LONDON
[5]  
DEVOL DL, 1988, J ANIM SCI, V66, P385
[6]  
DWYER CM, 1992, J ANAT, V181, P373
[7]   THE INFLUENCE OF MATERNAL NUTRITION ON MUSCLE-FIBER NUMBER DEVELOPMENT IN THE PORCINE FETUS AND ON SUBSEQUENT POSTNATAL-GROWTH [J].
DWYER, CM ;
STICKLAND, NC ;
FLETCHER, JM .
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 1994, 72 (04) :911-917
[8]  
Fang SH, 1999, J ANIM SCI, V77, P120
[9]  
Gondret F., 2005, Archiv fur Tierzucht, V48, P68
[10]   The cellularity of developing adipose tissues in Pietrain and Meishan pigs [J].
Hauser, N ;
Mourot, J ;
De Clercq, L ;
Genart, C ;
Remacle, C .
REPRODUCTION NUTRITION DEVELOPMENT, 1997, 37 (06) :617-625