Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis
The quantity and quality of dietary lipids is crucial for infant growth and development. The significance of the differences in n-6 and n-3 fatty acids in human milk, and the effect of maternal diet fat on various inflammatory mediators in the gastrointestinal tract of infants have received littl...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-176032018-01-05T17:39:00Z Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis Mundra, Harmeet Kaur The quantity and quality of dietary lipids is crucial for infant growth and development. The significance of the differences in n-6 and n-3 fatty acids in human milk, and the effect of maternal diet fat on various inflammatory mediators in the gastrointestinal tract of infants have received little attention. The aims of the present study were to determine the effect of maternal dietary fat composition on rat milk, intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and responsiveness to experimental colitis in suckling rat pups. Female rats were fed isocaloric diets varying only in fat composition throughout gestation and lactation. The oils used were high in n-3 (canola oil, 8% 18:3n-3), n-6 (safflower oil, 72% 18:2n-6), or n-9 (high oleic acid safflower oil, 78% 18:ln-9) fatty acids, n=6 dams/ group. A reference group of rats fed chow (37% 18:2n-6, 4% 18:3n-3, l%20:5n-3, 2% 22:6n-3) were also studied. Colitis was induced in the pups on postnatal day 15 by intra-rectal dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (DNBS) administration, with vehicle (50% ethanol) and procedure (0.9% saline) control pups. Jejunal and colonic phospholipids (phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine) and milk fatty acids were determined. The distal colon was assessed for macroscopic damage, histology and myeloperoxidase activity (MPO). The high n-6 maternal diet increased n-6 fatty acids, whereas the high n-3 diet increased n-3 fatty acids in milk and pup jejunal and colonic phospholipids. Maternal diet, milk and pup intestinal n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratios increased significantly in order: high 18:3n-3 < high 18:ln-9 < high 18:2n-6. DNBS administration in pups in the high 18:2n-6 group led to severe colitis with higher colonic damage scores and MPO activity than in 18:ln-9 and 18:3n-3 groups. High maternal dietary 18:3n-3 intake was associated with colonic damage scores and MPO activity that were not significantly different from ethanol controls. The composition of rat milk, pups intestinal fatty acids and n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratios in reference group were similar to high 18:3n-3 group, however, DNBS colitis was associated with higher colonic damage scores and MPO activity compared to high 18:3n-3 group. To conclude the maternal dietary fat influences the composition of rat milk fatty acids, intestinal lipids and responsiveness to experimental colitis in nursing offspring. Higher dietary n-3 fatty acids attenuate intestinal responsiveness to colitis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to suggest that the composition of milk fatty acids is associated with the nursing offspring's susceptibility to chemically-induced colitis. Land and Food Systems, Faculty of Graduate 2010-01-06T00:45:16Z 2010-01-06T00:45:16Z 2006 2006-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17603 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. |
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English |
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description |
The quantity and quality of dietary lipids is crucial for infant growth and
development. The significance of the differences in n-6 and n-3 fatty acids in human
milk, and the effect of maternal diet fat on various inflammatory mediators in the
gastrointestinal tract of infants have received little attention. The aims of the present
study were to determine the effect of maternal dietary fat composition on rat milk,
intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and responsiveness to experimental colitis in suckling
rat pups.
Female rats were fed isocaloric diets varying only in fat composition throughout
gestation and lactation. The oils used were high in n-3 (canola oil, 8% 18:3n-3), n-6
(safflower oil, 72% 18:2n-6), or n-9 (high oleic acid safflower oil, 78% 18:ln-9) fatty
acids, n=6 dams/ group. A reference group of rats fed chow (37% 18:2n-6, 4% 18:3n-3,
l%20:5n-3, 2% 22:6n-3) were also studied. Colitis was induced in the pups on postnatal
day 15 by intra-rectal dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (DNBS) administration, with vehicle
(50% ethanol) and procedure (0.9% saline) control pups. Jejunal and colonic
phospholipids (phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine) and milk fatty acids
were determined. The distal colon was assessed for macroscopic damage, histology and
myeloperoxidase activity (MPO).
The high n-6 maternal diet increased n-6 fatty acids, whereas the high n-3 diet
increased n-3 fatty acids in milk and pup jejunal and colonic phospholipids. Maternal
diet, milk and pup intestinal n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratios increased significantly in order:
high 18:3n-3 < high 18:ln-9 < high 18:2n-6. DNBS administration in pups in the high
18:2n-6 group led to severe colitis with higher colonic damage scores and MPO activity
than in 18:ln-9 and 18:3n-3 groups. High maternal dietary 18:3n-3 intake was associated
with colonic damage scores and MPO activity that were not significantly different from
ethanol controls. The composition of rat milk, pups intestinal fatty acids and n-6/n-3
fatty acid ratios in reference group were similar to high 18:3n-3 group, however, DNBS
colitis was associated with higher colonic damage scores and MPO activity compared to
high 18:3n-3 group. To conclude the maternal dietary fat influences the composition of
rat milk fatty acids, intestinal lipids and responsiveness to experimental colitis in nursing
offspring. Higher dietary n-3 fatty acids attenuate intestinal responsiveness to colitis. To
the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to suggest that the composition of milk
fatty acids is associated with the nursing offspring's susceptibility to chemically-induced
colitis. === Land and Food Systems, Faculty of === Graduate |
author |
Mundra, Harmeet Kaur |
spellingShingle |
Mundra, Harmeet Kaur Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
author_facet |
Mundra, Harmeet Kaur |
author_sort |
Mundra, Harmeet Kaur |
title |
Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
title_short |
Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
title_full |
Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
title_fullStr |
Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
title_sort |
maternal diet fat alters milk fatty acids, suckling pups’ intestinal phospholipid fatty acids and intestinal responsiveness to experimental colitis |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17603 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mundraharmeetkaur maternaldietfataltersmilkfattyacidssucklingpupsintestinalphospholipidfattyacidsandintestinalresponsivenesstoexperimentalcolitis |
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