Fiche publication
Date publication
novembre 2019
Journal
Nutrients
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr VERGELY Catherine
Tous les auteurs :
Yzydorczyk C, Li N, Rigal E, Chehade H, Mosig D, Armengaud JB, Rolle T, Krishnasamy A, Orozco E, Siddeek B, Juvet C, Vergely C, Simeoni U
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
Impaired early nutrition influences the risk of developing metabolic disorders in later life. We observed that transient postnatal overfeeding (OF) in mice induces long-term hepatic alterations, characterized by microsteatosis, fibrosis associated with oxidative stress (OS), and stress-induced premature senescence (SIPS). In this study, we investigated whether such changes can be reversed by moderate calorie restriction (CR). C57BL/6 male mice pups were maintained during lactation in litters adjusted to nine pups in the normal feeding (NF) group and three pups in the transient postnatal OF group. At six months of age, adult mice from the NF and OF groups were randomly assigned to an diet or CR (daily energy supply reduced by 20%) for one month. In each group, at the age of seven months, analysis of liver structure, liver markers of OS (superoxide anion, antioxidant defenses), and SIPS (lipofuscin, p53, p21, p16, pRb/Rb, Acp53, sirtuin-1) were performed. CR in the OF group reduced microsteatosis, decreased levels of superoxide anion, and increased protein expression of catalase and superoxide dismutase. Moreover, CR decreased lipofuscin staining, p21, p53, Acp53, and p16 but increased pRb/Rb and sirtuin-1 protein expression. CR did not affect the NF group. These results suggest that CR reduces hepatic disorders induced by OF.
Mots clés
DOHaD, developmental programming, liver, oxidative stress, reversibility, stress-induced premature senescence
Référence
Nutrients. 2019 Nov 16;11(11):