The effects of late pregnancy on metabolic fuels, liver composition, gluconeogenesis, and nitrogen metabolism have been examined in fed and fasted rats. Plasma free fatty acid (FFA) and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) are greater and glucose and ketones are lower in fed 19-day pregnant than they are in agematched virgin rats. A 48 hr fast elicits greater increases in FFA and ketones and more profound reductions in glucose in the pregnant rats and obliterates the differences in IRI. Fetal weight is not modified by such fasting but maternal weight losses exceed that of the nongravid rats. Livers from rats 19 days pregnant contain more and larger hepatocytes. Per mumole hepatic deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-phosphorus, water and protein are more abundant, whereas glycogen is unaffected. Livers from fed pregnant rats contain more lipid phosphorus and less neutral lipid fatty acid. After a 48 hr fast, hepatic steatosis supervenes in gravid animals due to accumulated neutral fat. The contents of hepatic acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and citric acid are not different in fed pregnant and virgin rats but are greater in the pregnant rats after fasting. Formation of glucose-(14)C and glycogen-(14)C from administered pyruvate-(14)C are the same in fed pregnant and virgin rats, but greater in the pregnant ones after a 24 or 48 hr fast. Pregnancy does not affect creatinine excretion, and urinary urea is not different in fed pregnant, virgin, and postpartum animals. Contrariwise, more nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus are excreted by the pregnant animals during a 2 day fast. The increment in urinary nitrogen is due largely to urea on the 1st day, whereas heightened ammonia accounts for half the increase on the 2nd and correlates with the enhanced ketonuria. Muscle catabolism, gluconeogenesis, and diversion to fat are activated more rapidly and to a greater degree when food is withheld during late gestation in the rat. These catabolic propensities are restrained in the fed state. The capacity for "accelerated starvation" may confer survival benefit upon an intermittently eating mother in the presence of a continuously feeding fetus.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI106192 | DOI Listing |
J Anim Sci
January 2025
Selko USA, Indianapolis, IN 46231, USA.
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December 2024
Pediatrics, School of Medicine & Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States of America. Electronic address:
Data support that fetal iron delivery is prioritized to hemoglobin in erythrocytes (RBC). Iron deficiency (ID) during pregnancy can cause congenital ID, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetab Brain Dis
December 2024
Dept. of Biochemistry, CSIR-Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, 570020, India.
Front Physiol
December 2024
Physiology Laboratory, Department of Animal Science, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, United States.
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Sistema Lechero, Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria, Ruta 50 km 11, CP 70002 Colonia, Uruguay. Electronic address:
The purpose of this experiment was to evaluate the transference of passive immunity (TPI) and growth achieved by calves born to dams with low or high SCC at dry-off and fed with colostrum from cows with low or high SCC at dry-off. Forty multiparous (3.2 lactations; SD = 1.
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