Abstract

2-week isocaloric modifications in the dietary ratio of polyunsaturated/saturated fatty acids (P/S) alters intestinal transport in rats. This study was undertaken to test the hypotheses that (1) the fatty acid composition of a nutritionally adequate diet in early life has lasting consequences for active and passive intestinal transport processes; and (2) early life feeding experiences with diets of varying fatty acid composition influence the intestines' ability to adaptively up- or down-regulate intestinal transport in later life. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were weaned onto S or P and were maintained on these diets for 2, 10 or 12 weeks. An in vitro uptake technique was used in which the bulk phase was vigorously stirred to reduce the effective resistance of the intestinal unstirred water layer. P decreased and S increased the uptake of glucose, and this effect was progressive from 2 to 12 weeks. Switching from a P to an S diet decreased jejunal but increased ileal uptake of glucose, whereas switching from an S to a P diet was associated with a decline in both the jejunal and the ileal uptake of glucose. The ileal uptake of galactose increased as the animals grew on either P or S. Switching from P to S resulted in a decline in ileal uptake of galactose, whereas the opposite effect was observed when switching from S to P. The effect of feeding P or S on hexose uptake was influenced by the animals' dietary history: ileal glucose and galactose uptake was lower in animals fed P at an early age (PSP) than in animals fed P for the first time in later life (SSP). Jejunal glucose and galactose uptake was also lower in animals fed S at an early age (SPS) than in those fed S for the first time in later life (PPS). The alterations in the uptake of long-chain saturated and unsaturated fatty acids and cholesterol did not progress with longer periods of feeding, and in the jejunum, lipid uptake did not change when switching from P to S or S to P. Early feeding with P (PSP vs. SSP) was associated with lower jejunal uptake of 18:3 and lower ileal uptake of 12:0, whereas previous feeding with S (SPS vs. PPS) was associated with lower ileal uptake of cholesterol. The changes in uptake of hexoses and lipids was not explained by differences in the animals' food consumption, body or intestinal weight or mucosal surface area. Thus, (1) the effect of changes in the dietary P/S ratio on hexose uptake are fast, progressive and irreversible, whereas the general effect on lipid uptake is nonprogressive and irreversible; and (2) the intestinal uptake of hexoses and some lipids is subject to critical-period programming. This late effect of early nutrition signifies that the adaptability of intestinal transport is subject to dietary variations shortly after weaning.

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