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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 288: R561-R566, 2005. First published November 18, 2004; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00353.2004
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Fetal Physiological Programming

Adult sterol metabolism is not affected by a positive sterol balance in the neonatal Golden Syrian hamster

Lihang Yao and Laura A. Woollett

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Cincinnati Medical School, Genome Research Institute, Cincinnati, Ohio

Submitted 1 June 2004 ; accepted in final form 16 November 2004

Dietary components impact metabolism early in life. Some of the diet-induced effects are long lasting and can lead to various adult-based diseases. In the current studies, we examined the short-term effects of dietary cholesterol on neonatal hepatic sterol metabolism and the long-term effects that those early-life diets had on sterol metabolism in adulthood. Neonatal hamsters began consuming solid food as a supplement to milk by 5 days of age; diets contained 0 or 2% added cholesterol (wt/wt). By 10 days of age, plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations were 3.2- and 2.5-fold greater, respectively, in the neonates fed cholesterol. Hepatic sterol synthesis rates were suppressed 65% in cholesterol-fed neonates compared with control neonates. By 20 days of age, plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations were still greater and sterol synthesis rates were now suppressed maximally in neonates fed cholesterol compared with control neonates. The expression level of an apolipoprotein B-containing lipoprotein receptor (low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein) was greater and the mature form of the sterol regulatory element-binding protein-2 was similar in livers of 20-day-old control neonates compared with control neonates at 10 days of age. To test whether the change in sterol balance in the neonatal period had a lasting effect on hepatic sterol metabolism, all animals were weaned on a low-cholesterol diet. At 70 days of age, hepatic sterol synthesis rates, plasma lipoprotein and liver cholesterol concentrations, and bile acid pool sizes and compositions were measured. Sterol balance in the adults was similar between animals fed either diet early in life, as demonstrated by a lack of difference in any parameter measured. Thus, even though dietary cholesterol suppressed hepatic sterol synthesis rates dramatically in the neonatal hamster, the change has little impact on sterol balance later in life.

heart disease; cholesterol; hamster; neonate



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. A. Woollett, Dept. of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Univ. of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 2120 East Galbraith Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45237-0507 (E-mail: Laura.Woollett{at}uc.edu)







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