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Developmental Programming-Aging Interactions Have Sex-Specific and Developmental Stage of Exposure Outcomes on Life Course Circulating Corticosterone and Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) Concentrations in Rats Exposed to Maternal Protein-Restricted Diets


Abstract The steroids corticosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) perform multiple life course functions. Rodent life-course circulating corticosterone and DHEA trajectories are unknown. We studied life course basal corticosterone and DHEA in offspring of rats fed protein-restricted (10% protein, R) or control (20% protein, C), pregnancy diet first letter, and/or lactation second letter, producing four offspring groups-CC, RR, CR, and RC. We hypothesize that 1. maternal diet programs are sexually dimorphic, offspring life course steroid concentrations, and 2. an aging-related steroid will fall. Both changes differ with the plastic developmental period offspring experienced R, fetal life or postnatally, pre-weaning. Corticosterone was measured by radioimmunoassay and DHEA by ELISA. Steroid trajectories were evaluated by quadratic analysis. Female corticosterone was higher than male in all groups. Male and female corticosterone were highest in RR, peaked at 450 days, and fell thereafter. DHEA declined with aging in all-male groups. DHEA: corticosterone fell in three male groups but increased in all-female groups with age. In conclusion, life course and sexually dimorphic steroid developmental programming-aging interactions may explain differences in steroid studies at different life stages and between colonies experiencing different early-life programming. These data support our hypotheses of sex and programming influences and aging-related fall in rat life course serum steroids. Life course studies should address developmental programming-aging interactions.
Authors Elena Zambrano ORCID , Luis A. Reyes‐Castro ORCID , Guadalupe L. Rodríguez‐González ORCID , Roberto Chavira , Consuelo Lomas‐Soria ORCID , Kenneth G. Gerow University of WyomingORCID , Peter W. Nathanielsz University of WyomingORCID
Journal Info Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute | Nutrients , vol: 15 , iss: 5 , pages: 1239 - 1239
Publication Date 3/1/2023
ISSN 2072-6643
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access gold Gold Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15051239
KeywordsKeyword Image Fetal Programming (Score: 0.494777)