Placental glucose transport in growth-restricted pregnancies induced by overnourishing adolescent sheep
Glucose clamp procedures were used to determine whether the slowing of fetal growth during the final third of gestation in overnourished adolescent ewes is due to a reduction in placental glucose transport capacity. Singleton pregnancies to a single sire were established by embryo transfer and there...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-02, Vol.547 (1), p.85-94 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Glucose clamp procedures were used to determine whether the slowing of fetal growth during the final third of gestation in
overnourished adolescent ewes is due to a reduction in placental glucose transport capacity. Singleton pregnancies to a single
sire were established by embryo transfer and thereafter adolescent dams were offered a high ( n = 11) or moderate ( n = 7) nutrient intake. Studies were conducted at 130 ± 0.5 days gestation. Uterine and umbilical blood flows were studied
by the steady-state transplacental diffusion technique and glucose fluxes quantified by the Fick principle. To determine the
relationship between the transplacental glucose gradient and umbilical (fetal) glucose uptake, studies were conducted with
maternal arterial glucose clamped at 5 µmol ml â1 and fetal glucose at spontaneously occurring and two additional higher levels. Maternal body weight gain during gestation
averaged 282 and 57 g day â1 for high- and moderate-intake dams, respectively. Total placentome weight (209 ± 23 vs. 386 ± 34 g) and fetal weight (3072 ± 266 vs. 4670 ± 196 g) were lower ( P < 0.001) in high- than in moderate-intake groups. The growth-restricted pregnancies in the high-intake dams were associated
with reduced uterine ( P < 0.05) and umbilical ( P < 0.02) blood flows and, in the non-perturbed state, the fetuses were relatively hypoxic (2.1 vs . 3.0 µmol ml â1 , P < 0.05) and hypoglycaemic (0.90 vs . 1.31 µmol ml â1 , P < 0.002). Linear regression analysis of umbilical glucose uptake at three steady-state uterine-umbilical arterial transplacental
plasma glucose concentration gradients revealed that absolute placental glucose transport capacity was lower in high- than
in moderate-intake dams (mean slope, 0.8 vs. 1.5 dl min â1 , P < 0.05; and mean intercept, 1.84 vs. 3.40 µmol ml â1 ). However, glucose transfer capacity was not different between the two groups when expressed on a placental weight-specific
basis. This confirms that the small size of the placenta per se is the major limitation to placental glucose transfer in the overnourished adolescent pregnant sheep. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.023333 |