Short- and long-term effects of maternal nicotine exposure during lactation on body adiposity, lipid profile, and thyroid function of rat offspring
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Journal of Endocrinology
Abstract
Epidemiological studies show a higher prevalence of obesity
in children from smoking mothers and smoking may affect
human thyroid function. To evaluate the mechanism of
smoking as an imprinting factor for these dysfunctions, we
evaluated the programing effects of maternal nicotine (NIC)
exposure during lactation. Two days after birth, osmotic
minipumps were implanted in lactating rats, divided into:
NIC (6 mg/kg per day s.c.) for 14 days; Control – saline. All
the significant data were P!0.05 or less. Body weight was
increased from 165 days old onwards in NIC offspring.
Both during exposure (at 15 days old) and in adulthood
(180 days old), NIC group showed higher total fat (27 and
33%). In addition, NIC offspring presented increased
visceral fat and total body protein. Lipid profile was not
changed in adulthood. Leptinemia was higher at 15 and
180 days old (36 and 113%), with no changes in food intake.
Concerning the thyroid status, the 15-days-old NIC
offspring showed lower serum-free tri-iodothyronine (FT3)
and thyroxine (FT4) with higher TSH. The 180-days-old
NIC offspring exhibited lower TSH, FT3, and FT4). In both
periods, liver type 1 deiodinase was lower (26 and 55%).
We evidenced that NIC imprints a neonatal thyroid
dysfunction and programs for a higher adiposity, hyper leptinemia, and secondary hypothyroidism in adulthood.
Our study identifies lactation as a critical period to NIC
programing for obesity, with hypothyroidism being a
possible contributing factor.
Description
p. 397–405.: il. p&b.
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Citation
OLIVEIRA, Elaine de et al. Short- and long-term effects of maternal nicotine exposure during lactation on body adiposity, lipid profile, and thyroid function of rat offspring. Journal of Endocrinology, v. 202, p. 397–405, 2009.