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Maternal Isocaloric High-Fat Diet Induces Liver Mitochondria Maladaptations and Homeostatic Disturbances Intensifying Mitochondria Damage in Response to Fructose Intake in Adult Male Rat Offspring

Authors :
Aline F. P. Souza
Juliana Woyames
Rosiane A. Miranda
Lorraine S. Oliveira
Bruna Caetano
Isabela L. Martins
Manuella S. Souza
Cherley B. V. Andrade
Thais Bento‐Bernardes
Flavia F. Bloise
Rodrigo S. Fortunato
Isis H. Trevenzoli
Luana L. Souza
Carmen C. Pazos‐Moura
Source :
Molecular nutritionfood research. 66(8)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Perinatal maternal obesity and excessive fructose consumption have been associated with liver metabolic diseases. The study investigates whether moderate maternal high-fat diet affects the liver mitochondria responses to fructose intake in adult offspring.Wistar female rats have received a standard diet (mSTD) or high-fat diet (mHFD) (9% and 28.6% fat, respectively), before mating until the end of lactation. Male offspring were fed standard diet from weaning to adulthood and received water or fructose-drinking water (15%) from 120 to 150 days old. Fructose induces liver mitochondrial ultrastructural alterations with higher intensity in mHFD offspring, accompanied by reduced autophagy markers. Isolated mitochondria respirometry shows unaltered ATP-coupled oxygen consumption with increased Atp5f1b mRNA only in mHFD offspring. Fructose increases basal respiration and encoding complex I-III mRNA, only in mSTD offspring. Uncoupled respiration is lower in mHFD mitochondria that are unable to exhibit fructose-induced increase Ucp2 mRNA. Fructose decreases antioxidative defense markers, increases unfolded protein response and insulin resistance only in mHFD offspring without fructose-induced hepatic lipid accumulation.Mitochondrial dysfunction and homeostatic disturbances in response to fructose are early events evidencing the higher risk of fructose damage in the liver of adult offspring from dams fed an isocaloric moderate high-fat diet.

Details

ISSN :
16134133
Volume :
66
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular nutritionfood research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c7b7b221349512d9dbf33a92e392191a