Body mass index, body composition, and leptin at onset of puberty in male and female rats after intrauterine growth retardation and after early postnatal food restriction.

Pediatr Res

Department of Clinical Chemistry, the Research Institute for Endocrinology, Reproduction and Metabolism, VU Medical Center, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2001

In this study we examined the body composition at onset of puberty in intrauterine growth retarded (IUGR), postnatal food restricted (FR), and control male and female rats. IUGR was induced by ligation of the uterine artery on d 17 of gestation and FR by litter enlargement to 20 pups per mother from d 2 after birth until weaning (d 24). We defined onset of puberty as balanopreputial separation in male rats and vaginal opening in female rats. We calculated body mass index, measured body composition with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, and measured leptin concentrations in serum. It was reported previously that early malnutrition, either during late gestation or immediately postnatally, results in a delayed onset of puberty in IUGR and FR male rats and in IUGR female rats, but not in FR female rats. In IUGR male rats at balanopreputial separation and in IUGR female rats at vaginal opening no differences were found in body mass index, body composition, and leptin levels compared with controls. FR male rats had a significantly lower percentage of fat and serum leptin concentrations at balanopreputial separation. FR female rats had a significantly lower body mass index, percentage of fat, and serum leptin concentrations at vaginal opening. We conclude that the onset of puberty in the rat is not dependent on a certain percentage of body fat or a certain threshold of circulating levels of leptin and that food deprivation during different "critical" time periods around birth results in different effects in later life.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1203/00006450-200110000-00009DOI Listing

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