Abstract

BackgroundChanges in the nutritional supply during the perinatal period can lead to metabolic disturbances and obesity in adulthood. ObjectiveThe divergent litter size model was used to investigate the hypothalamic sensitivity to leptin and ghrelin as well as the mechanisms involved in the disruption of food intake and energy expenditure. MethodsOn postnatal day 3 (P3), male Wistar rats were divided into 3 groups: small litter (SL – 3 pups), normal litter (NL – 10 pups), and large litter (LL – 16 pups). Animals at P60 were intraperitoneally treated with leptin (500 µg/Kg), ghrelin (40 µg/Kg), or vehicle (0.9% NaCl) at 5 pm and the following parameters were assessed: food intake and body weight; immunostaining of p-STAT-3 in the hypothalamus; Western Blotting analysis of p-AMPKα and UCP2 in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH), and UCP1 in the interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT); or heat production, VO2, VCO2, and locomotor activity. ResultsSL rats had earlier leptin and ghrelin surges, while LL rats had no variations. At P60, after leptin treatment, LL rats showed hypophagia and increased p-STAT-3 expression in the arcuate nucleus, but SL rats had no response. After ghrelin treatment, LL rats did not have the orexigenic response or AMPKα phosphorylation in the MBH, while SL animals, unexpectedly, decreased body weight gain, without changes in food intake, and increased metabolic parameters and UCP1 expression in the BAT. ConclusionsChanges in the nutritional supply at early stages of life modify leptin and ghrelin responsiveness in adulthood, programming metabolic and central mechanisms, which contribute to overweight and obesity in adulthood.

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