Abstract
Female rats were fed a normal or hypoproteic diet during the phases of gestation and lactation. The male offspring of these rats were grown to adulthood and used to study the effects of maternal protein malnutrition on progeny. The adult male rats were pretreated with either saline or LPS and subjected to behavioral tests 2 and 6 h after administration. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α), corticosterone and body temperature were the parameters used for assessment. Two hours after LPS administration, sickness behavior was developed in all the animals, regardless of maternal protein malnutrition. After 6 h of LPS administration, sickness behavior was more pronounced in the rats that had been subjected to maternal protein malnutrition. Only the rats with maternal protein malnutrition expressed an increase in the plasma levels of TNF-α and corticosterone. Maternal protein malnutrition prolongs sickness behaviors in offspring.
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