Diet-induced obesity impairs mammary development and lactogenesis in murine mammary gland

被引:74
作者
Flint, DJ [1 ]
Travers, MT
Barber, MC
Binart, N
Kelly, PA
机构
[1] Hannah Res Inst, Ayr KA6 5HL, Scotland
[2] Fac Med Rene Descartes, INSERM, U584, Paris, France
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM | 2005年 / 288卷 / 06期
关键词
high fat; acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase; morphogenesis;
D O I
10.1152/ajpendo.00433.2004
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
We have developed a mouse model of diet-induced obesity that shows numerous abnormalities relating to mammary gland function. Animals ate similar to 40% more calories when offered a high-fat diet and gained weight at three times the rate of controls. They exhibited reduced conception rates, increased peripartum pup mortality, and impaired lactogenesis. The impairment of lactogenesis involved lipid accumulation in the secretory epithelial cells indicative of an absence of copius milk secretion. Expression of mRNAs for beta-casein, whey acid protein, and alpha-lactalbumin were all decreased immediately postpartum but recovered as lactation was established over 2-3 days. Expression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC)-alpha mRNA was also decreased at parturition as was the total enzyme activity, although there was a compensatory increase in the proportion in the active state. By day 10 of lactation, the proportion of ACC in the active state was also decreased in obese animals, indicative of suppression of de novo fatty acid synthesis resulting from the supply of preformed fatty acids in the diet. Although obese animals consumed more calories in the nonpregnant and early pregnant states, they showed a marked depression in fat intake around day 9 of pregnancy before food intake recovered in later pregnancy. Food intake increased dramatically in both lean and obese animals during lactation although total calories consumed were identical in both groups. Thus, despite access to high-energy diets, the obese animals mobilized even more adipose tissue during lactation than their lean counterparts. Obese animals also exhibited marked abnormalities in alveolar development of the mammary gland, which may partially explain the delay in differentiation evident during lactogenesis.
引用
收藏
页码:E1179 / E1187
页数:9
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]   Growth hormone, acting in part through the insulin-like growth factor axis, rescues developmental, but not metabolic, activity in the mammary gland of mice expressing a single allele of the prolactin receptor [J].
Allan, GJ ;
Tonner, E ;
Barber, MC ;
Travers, MT ;
Shand, JH ;
Vernon, RG ;
Kelly, PA ;
Binart, N ;
Flint, DJ .
ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2002, 143 (11) :4310-4319
[2]   Developmental regulation of alternatively spliced acetyl-CoA carboxylase-α mRNAs encoding isozymes with or without an eight amino acid domain upstream of the Ser-1200 phosphorylation motif in the mammary gland [J].
Barber, MC ;
Pooley, L ;
Travers, MT .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2001, 27 (03) :349-356
[3]   MECHANISMS WHEREBY PROLACTIN MODULATES LIPOGENESIS IN SHEEP MAMMARY-GLAND [J].
BARBER, MC ;
FINLEY, E ;
VERNON, RG .
HORMONE AND METABOLIC RESEARCH, 1991, 23 (03) :143-145
[4]   GROWTH-HORMONE INHIBITION OF LIPOGENESIS IN SHEEP ADIPOSE-TISSUE - REQUIREMENT FOR GENE-TRANSCRIPTION AND POLYAMINES [J].
BORLAND, CA ;
BARBER, MC ;
TRAVERS, MT ;
VERNON, RG .
JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY, 1994, 142 (02) :235-243
[5]   Health hazards of obesity [J].
Bray, GA .
ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 1996, 25 (04) :907-+
[6]   Influence of prepubertal dietary regimen on mammary growth of Holstein heifers [J].
Capuco, AV ;
Smith, JJ ;
Waldo, DR ;
Rexroad, CE .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 1995, 78 (12) :2709-2725
[7]   Correction of the sterility defect in homozygous obese female mice by treatment with the human recombinant leptin [J].
Chehab, FE ;
Lim, ME ;
Lu, RH .
NATURE GENETICS, 1996, 12 (03) :318-320
[8]   Adipose tissue: A vital in vivo role in mammary gland development but not differentiation [J].
Couldrey, C ;
Moitra, J ;
Vinson, C ;
Anver, M ;
Nagashima, K ;
Green, J .
DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, 2002, 223 (04) :459-468
[9]   Elucidation of a Role for Stromal Steroid Hormone Receptors in Mammary Gland Growth and Development Using Tissue Recombinants [J].
Cunha, G. R. ;
Young, P. ;
Horn, Y. K. ;
Cooke, P. S. ;
Taylor, J. A. ;
Lubahn, D. B. .
JOURNAL OF MAMMARY GLAND BIOLOGY AND NEOPLASIA, 1997, 2 (04) :393-402
[10]   Does maternal obesity adversely affect breastfeeding initiation and duration? [J].
Donath, SM ;
Amir, LH .
JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, 2000, 36 (05) :482-486