Abstract

A reduction in the availability of oxygen and nutrients across the placenta in the last trimester of pregnancy may lead to intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) which, in turn, may cause a persistent postnatal growth failure. However, it is unknown whether this persistent growth retardation is centrally mediated through alterations in the components of the growth hormone (GH)-axis. We tested the hypothesis that alterations in the development of the central components of the GH-axis contribute to the persistent growth failure observed after experimentally induced IUGR or early postnatal food restriction (FR) in the rat. Using semi-quantitative in situ hybridization, we compared somatostatin (SS), GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) mRNA levels in adult rats experimentally subjected to IUGR or FR. We report that IUGR increased the expression of SS mRNA in the periventricular nucleus (PeN) of adult male and female rats by 128% and 153% respectively, did not alter the expression of GHRH mRNA in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and decreased the NPY mRNA expression in the ARC by 73% in males and 61% in females, whereas in the FR group no changes in the expression of these mRNAs were observed. These data show that the timing of malnutrition or the presence of the placenta is important for the long-term alterations since the effects only occurred in the prenatally induced growth retardation and not in the early postnatally induced growth retardation group.

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