Maternal nutritional supplementation with fish oil and/or leucine improves hepatic function and antioxidant defenses, and minimizes cachexia indexes in Walker-256 tumor-bearing rats offspring.

Nutr Res

Laboratory of Nutrition and Cancer, Department of Structural and Functional Biology, Biology Institute, University of Campinas, UNICAMP, Rua Monteiro Lobato, 255, Campinas, São Paulo, 13083862, Brazil. Electronic address:

Published: March 2018

In this study, we hypothesized that throughout the pregnancy/weaning period, nutritional supplementation with leucine (which improves protein synthesis) and/or fish oil (rich in omega-3, which modulates oxidative stress) can minimize/improve cachexia-induced damage in rat offspring. Thus, we investigated the maternal supplementation with these nutrients over the modulation of cachexia index and liver function in tumor-bearing rats offspring. Pregnant rats were fed control, leucine, omega-3, and leucine/omega-3 diets, which were given throughout the gestational and weaning periods. The male offspring were subjected to a control diet until adulthood (120 days) and then distributed into 5 groups (n=4-6 per group): C, Control; W, tumor-bearing; WL, tumor-bearing group with a maternal leucine-rich diet; WO, tumor-bearing group with a maternal omega-3 diet; and WLO, tumor-bearing group with a maternal leucine-rich and omega-3 diet. The W group had a higher cachexia index (31.83 ± 2.9%), but this parameter decreased in the WO (P=0.0380) and WLO groups (P=0.0187). In addition, the W group had a lower survival rate, and the WLO group exhibited a trend toward increased survival (P=0.0505). The hepatic function in maternal supplemented groups was preserved, while the W group exhibited an increased aspartate-aminotransferase/alanine-aminotransferase ratios (P=0.0152) and also enhanced liver oxidative stress, with higher alkaline phosphatase (P=0.0190) and superoxide dismutase (P=0.0190) activities, and trended toward to higher malondialdehyde content (P=0.0556). In contrast, the maternal-supplemented groups had similar liver enzymes and malondialdehyde contents. Thus, we concluded that supplementing the maternal diet modulated/improved liver antioxidant responses and ameliorated the cachexia state in tumor-bearing rat offspring.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nutres.2017.12.003DOI Listing

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