Abstract

Female rats were fed from weaning on diets with sucrose, starch, glucose or fructose as the carbohydrate source. Animals were killed at various stages throughout pregnancy and early lactation. Maternal plasma triglycerides (TG), cholesterol, free fatty acids, glucose, insulin and corticosteroids were measured. Lipogenic activity was assayed in the livers, adipose tissue and mammary tissue, and the results compared with those from non-pregnant rats. Insulin, corticosteroids and hepatic lipogenesis were also assayed in the embryos and in newborn pups. Dietary sucrose and fructose produced a significantly higher concentration of plasma TG in the non-pregnant, pregnant and lactating rats than did starch and glucose. All the diets led to an increase in TG concentration at the 20th day of pregnancy, which returned to the original concentration 2 days post-partum. The hypertriglyceridaemia of late pregnancy was accentuated by the feeding of sucrose and fructose. Maternal concentrations of plasma glucose were significantly reduced towards the end of pregnancy in all dietary groups. The replacement of starch by sucrose, or of glucose by fructose, enhanced hepatic lipogenesis. Fructose but not sucrose depressed fat synthesis in the adipose tissue. Hepatic fatty acid synthetase activity was increased in late pregnancy on all diets except that with starch. Late pregnancy intensified hepatic lipogenesis in rats fed sucrose or fructose. The results are discussed in relation to the metabolic changes during pregnancy and to sucrose feeding.

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