Litcius/Paper detail

Maternal sucrose consumption alters behaviour and steroids in adult rat offspring

Daniel J Tobiansky, George V Kachkovski, Reilly T Enos, Kim L Schmidt, E Angela Murphy, Stan B Floresco, Kiran K Soma

2021Journal of Endocrinology17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Maternal diets can have dramatic effects on the physiology, metabolism, and behaviour of offspring that persist into adulthood. However, the effects of maternal sucrose consumption on offspring remain unclear. Here, female rats were fed either a sucrose diet with a human-relevant level of sucrose (25% of kcal) or a macronutrient-matched, isocaloric control diet before, during, and after pregnancy. After weaning, all offspring were fed a standard low-sucrose rodent chow. We measured indicators of metabolism (weight, adipose, glucose tolerance, and liver lipids) during development and adulthood (16-24 weeks). We also measured food preference and motivation for sugar rewards in adulthood. Finally, in brain regions regulating these behaviours, we measured steroids and transcripts for steroidogenic enzymes, steroid receptors, and dopamine receptors. In male offspring, maternal sucrose intake decreased body mass and visceral adipose tissue, increased preference for high-sucrose and high-fat diets, increased motivation for sugar rewards, and decreased mRNA levels of Cyp17a1 (an androgenic enzyme) in the nucleus accumbens. In female offspring, maternal sucrose intake increased basal corticosterone levels. These data demonstrate the enduring, diverse, and sex-specific effects of maternal sucrose consumption on offspring phenotype.

Topics & Concepts

OffspringEndocrinologyInternal medicineCorticosteroneSucroseDietary SucroseBiologySugarBasal (medicine)Adipose tissueLactationCarbohydrateObesityAdult maleHormoneWhite adipose tissueBrown adipose tissueFructoseMaternal effectRestricted dietPreference testStress Responses and CortisolRegulation of Appetite and ObesityNeuroendocrine regulation and behavior