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Maternal fructose intake aggravates the harmful effects of a Western diet in rat male descendants impacting their cholesterol metabolism


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Title: Maternal fructose intake aggravates the harmful effects of a Western diet in rat male descendants impacting their cholesterol metabolism
Authors : Fauste Alonso, Elena
Panadero Antón, María Isabel
Pérez Armas, Madelín
Donis Rodríguez, Cristina
López Laiz, P
Sevillano Fernández, Julio
Sánchez Alonso, María Gracia
Ramos Álvarez, María del Pilar
Otero Gómez, Paola
Bocos de Prada, Carlos
Keywords: FructosePregnancyFetal programmingCholesterolWestern diet
Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation: Fauste E, Panadero MI, Pérez-Armas M, Donis C, López-Laiz P, Sevillano J, Sánchez-Alonso MG, Ramos-Álvarez MP, Otero P, Bocos C. Maternal fructose intake aggravates the harmful effects of a Western diet in rat male descendants impacting their cholesterol metabolism. Food Funct. 2024 Jun 4;15(11):6147-6163. doi: 10.1039/d4fo01466a.
Fauste E, Panadero MI, Pérez-Armas M, Donis C, López-Laiz P, Sevillano J, Sánchez-Alonso MG, Ramos-Álvarez MP, Otero P, Bocos C. Maternal fructose intake aggravates the harmful effects of a Western diet in rat male descendants impacting their cholesterol metabolism. [Dataset]. Depósito digital en CEU ReI, http://hdl.handle.net/10637/16352
Abstract: Scope: fructose consumption from added sugars correlates with the epidemic rise in MetS and CVD. Maternal fructose intake has been described to program metabolic diseases in progeny. However, consumption of fructose-containing beverages is allowed during gestation. Cholesterol is also a well-known risk factor for CVD. Therefore, it is essential to study Western diets which combine fructose and cholesterol and how maternal fructose can influence the response of progeny to these diets. Methods and results: a high-cholesterol (2%) diet combined with liquid fructose (10%), as a model of an unhealthy Western diet, was administered to descendants from control and fructose-fed mothers. Gene (mRNA and protein) expression and plasma, fecal and tissue parameters of cholesterol metabolism were measured. Interestingly, progeny from fructose-fed dams consumed less liquid fructose and cholesterol-rich chow than males from control mothers. Moreover, descendants of fructose-fed mothers fed a Western diet showed an increased cholesterol elimination through bile and feces than males from control mothers. Despite these mitigating circumstances to develop a proatherogenic profile, the same degree of hypercholesterolemia and severity of steatosis were observed in all descendants fed a Western diet, independently of maternal intake. An increased intestinal absorption of cholesterol, synthesis, esterification, and assembly into lipoprotein found in males from fructose-fed dams consuming a Western diet could be the cause. Moreover, an augmented GLP2 signalling seen in these animals would explain this enhanced lipid absorption. Conclusions: maternal fructose intake, through a fetal programming, makes a Western diet considerably more harmful in their descendants than in the offspring from control mothers.
Description: Se adjuntan datos de investigación y fichero Readme.txt
Versión aceptada de la publicación con fecha fin de embargo siguiendo política editorial del 14 de mayo de 2025
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10637/16352
Rights : http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es
ISSN: 2042-650X
metadata.dc.date.endEmbargo: 2025-05-14
Issue Date: 14-May-2024
Center : Universidad San Pablo-CEU
Appears in Collections:Facultad de Farmacia





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