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Increased systolic blood pressure in rats induced by a maternal low-protein diet is reversed by dietary supplementation with glycine

Increased systolic blood pressure in rats induced by a maternal low-protein diet is reversed by dietary supplementation with glycine
Increased systolic blood pressure in rats induced by a maternal low-protein diet is reversed by dietary supplementation with glycine
When rat dams consume a diet low in protein during pregnancy, their offspring develop high blood pressure. On a low-protein diet, the endogenous formation of the amino acid glycine is thought to become constrained. Glycine may become conditionally essential, as its rate of endogenous formation is inadequate to meet metabolic needs, and may be limiting for the normal development of the fetus. In the present study, five groups of Wistar rats were provided during pregnancy with one of five diets: a control diet containing 18% (w/w) casein (CON), a low-protein diet containing 9% casein (MLP), or the low-protein diet supplemented with 3% glycine (MLPG), alanine (MLPA) or urea (MLPU). The offspring were weaned on to standard laboratory chow, and blood pressure was measured at 4 weeks of age. Blood pressure was significantly increased in the MLP, MLPA and MLPU groups compared with the CON group, but for the MLPG group blood pressure was not significantly different from CON. Compared with the CON group, body weight was significantly reduced for the MLP, MLPA and MLPG groups, but for the MLPU group body weight was not different from CON. These data show that different forms of non-essential dietary nitrogen, when consumed during pregnancy, exert different effects upon the growth and function of the offspring. The availability of glycine appears to be of critical importance for normal cardiovascular development.
alanine, amino acid, fetus, glycine, growth, hypertension, metabolic programming, methionine, pregnancy, protein, urea
0143-5221
633-639
Jackson, Alan A.
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Dunn, Rebecca L.
12de9ebd-9722-4d41-88d2-bbee4d38023c
Marchand, Michael C.
23b9a894-435c-4caa-a771-6b74f8a10867
Langley-Evans, Simon C.
286fda62-09a1-4cf6-8ef2-36b571fcd334
Jackson, Alan A.
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Dunn, Rebecca L.
12de9ebd-9722-4d41-88d2-bbee4d38023c
Marchand, Michael C.
23b9a894-435c-4caa-a771-6b74f8a10867
Langley-Evans, Simon C.
286fda62-09a1-4cf6-8ef2-36b571fcd334

Jackson, Alan A., Dunn, Rebecca L., Marchand, Michael C. and Langley-Evans, Simon C. (2002) Increased systolic blood pressure in rats induced by a maternal low-protein diet is reversed by dietary supplementation with glycine. Clinical Science, 103 (6), 633-639.

Record type: Article

Abstract

When rat dams consume a diet low in protein during pregnancy, their offspring develop high blood pressure. On a low-protein diet, the endogenous formation of the amino acid glycine is thought to become constrained. Glycine may become conditionally essential, as its rate of endogenous formation is inadequate to meet metabolic needs, and may be limiting for the normal development of the fetus. In the present study, five groups of Wistar rats were provided during pregnancy with one of five diets: a control diet containing 18% (w/w) casein (CON), a low-protein diet containing 9% casein (MLP), or the low-protein diet supplemented with 3% glycine (MLPG), alanine (MLPA) or urea (MLPU). The offspring were weaned on to standard laboratory chow, and blood pressure was measured at 4 weeks of age. Blood pressure was significantly increased in the MLP, MLPA and MLPU groups compared with the CON group, but for the MLPG group blood pressure was not significantly different from CON. Compared with the CON group, body weight was significantly reduced for the MLP, MLPA and MLPG groups, but for the MLPU group body weight was not different from CON. These data show that different forms of non-essential dietary nitrogen, when consumed during pregnancy, exert different effects upon the growth and function of the offspring. The availability of glycine appears to be of critical importance for normal cardiovascular development.

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More information

Published date: 2002
Keywords: alanine, amino acid, fetus, glycine, growth, hypertension, metabolic programming, methionine, pregnancy, protein, urea

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25656
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25656
ISSN: 0143-5221
PURE UUID: c12953c9-6b6f-4ac6-aba3-beb7b03d6894

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Apr 2006
Last modified: 23 Feb 2023 17:42

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Contributors

Author: Alan A. Jackson
Author: Rebecca L. Dunn
Author: Michael C. Marchand
Author: Simon C. Langley-Evans

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