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Control (C) or Thymoma (T) implanted male C57BL/6J mice received a basal diet containing 16.5% glucose (G) or fructose (F). Compared to the C-G group, the C-F mice consumed more food and less water, and gained more weight. The blood glucose, insulin and triglyceride levels were higher in the C-F than in the C-G mice. Thymoma implantation into the right flank caused a transient decrease in body weight followed by a steady increase due to tumour growth. Tumours were detected earlier and tumour size was greater in the T-F group than in the T-G mice. Tumour chemical composition was similar in both groups. Blood analysis showed that the T mice had lower glucose and higher insulin and triglyceride levels than the C group. Carcasses from the T groups contained more water and ash and less fat than their C counterparts, but the type of sugar did not affect the body composition of the C or T groups. The results suggest that dietary fructose may enhance the growth of tumour via its hyperinsulinaemic action.
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PMID:Insulin-tumour interrelationships in thymoma bearing mice. Effects of dietary glucose and fructose. 176 66

Male C57BL/65 mice received a basal diet supplemented with 4% soya-bean oil, linseed oil or fish oil, in which the major polyunsaturated fatty acids were linoleic acid, alpha-linolenic acid and long chain omega-3 fatty acids, respectively. Groups of animals were injected into the right flank with EL4-lymphoma cells, others with thymoma cells. Tumour implantation caused a gradual decrease in food consumption with both types of tumour, while body weight increased, especially in the EL4-bearing animals receiving the soya-bean diet. The weight gain was due to body water accumulation and was accompanied by decreases in body fat and minor changes in carcass protein and ash contents. The dietary treatments did not produce significant differences in tumour incidence and mortality, but tumour size was decreased by diets supplying omega-3 fatty acids: in the EL4 mice tumour weight was markedly depressed by linseed oil, compared to soya-bean oil, whereas thymoma tumour weight was lowest in mice receiving fish oil and highest in the soya-bean oil group. Both types of tumour caused pronounced hypoglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia in the hosts, and the effect was modulated by the diets in the EL4 but not in the thymoma animals: the plasma glucose level was especially low in the linseed oil group and relatively highest in the soya-bean oil treatment. The degree of hyperinsulinaemia depended on the diet only in the thymoma-bearing mice, with linseed and fish oils producing higher insulin levels than soya-bean oil. A slight hyperinsulinaemia was also observed in linseed and fish oil-fed control mice. Serum triglycerides were elevated in tumour-bearing animals, without consistent differences between dietary treatments. Although no clear pattern emerged concerning total cholesterol and LDL levels, HDL values were strongly affected by the type of oil: in the control animals linseed oil caused an increase in HDL-cholesterol compared to the other two oils. The thymoma-bearing mice responded to the linseed and fish oil diets with greatly elevated HDL-cholesterol levels. The results point to important differences in the responses of the two implanted tumours and hosts not only to the omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids, but also to the type of dietary omega-3 fatty acids, namely alpha-linolenic acid and long chain fish oil polyunsaturated fatty acids.
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PMID:Insulin-tumour interrelationships in EL4-lymphoma or thymoma-bearing mice. II. Effects of dietary omega-3 and omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids. 212 37

Bilateral adrenalectomy (ADX) of 4-month-old ob/ob mice led to reduced rates of body weight gain, a complete cessation of fat deposition and increased percentage carcass protein and ash during a 2-month observation period after surgery. However, ADX obese mice were still heavier and had more body fat and lower concentrations of carcass protein and ash than intact sex-matched littermate lean mice at the end of the experiment. When adrenalectomy was performed in younger obese mice before the syndrome was fully expressed (23 +/- 2 days of age), body weight gain was reduced by 40 per cent and fat deposition by 50 per cent during the next 3.5 months, but each was still greater than that of littermate lean mice. Despite the lower rate of weight gain after adrenalectomy, the skeletal and lean body growth of the early ADX obese mice equalled that of both obese and lean mice fed ad libitum. When the carcass composition of early ADX obese mice was compared with that of intact obese mice which were calorically restricted to the same rate of body weight gain, the ADX group had significantly less carcass fat (28 per cent) and more protein (50 per cent) and ash (20 per cent) than the dieted obese mice. In both experiments adrenalectomy led to reduced circulating immunoreactive insulin levels, although hyperinsulinemia persisted. The present results show that adrenalectomy is an effective tool for ameliorating the severity of many aspects of the ob/ob syndrome, particularly when compared with caloric restriction, but the procedure does not entirely reverse the deranged metabolism or abnormal carcass composition of these mice.
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PMID:Adrenalectomy reduces but does not reverse obesity in ob/ob mice. 352 53

Recombinant chicken GH (rcGH) was produced and characterized. Comparison of protein sequence, amino acid composition, mol wt, purity, and immunocross-reactivity showed that except for the N-terminal methionyl group arising from the bacterial expression system, the recombinant and pituitary-derived cGHs were identical. When tested in a hypophysectomized rat growth assay, the recombinant and pituitary materials had the same specific bioactivity. Within 60 min after sc injection of rcGH (480-960 micrograms/kg) in chickens, plasma GH levels increased 4- to 6-fold and remained significantly elevated for at least 5 h. Thrice-daily injections from age 2-24 days had little effect on growth or feed consumption in either male or female broiler chicks. Plasma levels of insulin and triglycerides were significantly elevated by rcGH in 24-day-old females, but not in males. Injection of rcGH counteracted a reduction of tibia length observed in saline-injected controls. The rcGH had no effect on carcass protein, ash content, or nitrogen retention. It is important to note that exogenous GH can be a productivity-enhancing factor in other commercially important species. Administration of bovine GH to cows has been shown to induce a significant increase in milk production (28). This study shows that administration of rcGH to chickens can lead to some significant metabolic effects. However, it is the conclusion of this report that the level of circulating GH is not the limiting factor in the growth of this highly selected species.
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PMID:The properties of recombinant chicken growth hormone and its effects on growth, body composition, feed efficiency, and other factors in broiler chickens. 380 95

The effect of mild, non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) on bone calcification and calcium (Ca) homeostasis was studied in growing rats (males and females). The diabetic state was characterized by mild insulin deficiency, plasma levels being 73% of controls, and mild hyperglycemia, with nonfasting plasma glucose levels of 1.5 times normal. There was no difference in plasma levels of Ca, phosphate (Pi), magnesium (Mg), alkaline phosphatase, immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH), calcitonin, 25-(OH)vitamin D (25[OH]D), 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25[OH]2D), and 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (24,25[OH]2D) between the NIDDM rats and their controls of either sex. Metabolic Ca and Pi balance studies revealed that the experimental animals of both sexes were in positive Ca and Pi balance similar to that of their controls. Histologic studies of the kidney and intestinal slices from the experimental group were normal. Ca and Pi bone content calculated per gram bone ash of the femur, mandible, and second and fourth caudal vertebrae, and the organic content in the bones of the NIDDM animals showed no difference from their controls. Femur bone density and tibial epiphyseal growth plate width and morphology were similar histologically in the experimental and control rats. No decreased osteoid content in the tibial bone was found in the diabetic rats compared with controls. Physiologic sex differences, consisting of lower plasma Pi, higher plasma calcitonin levels, increased ratio of femur dry bone weight to total body weight, and increased percentage of mineralized and total bone volume at the tibial metaphysis seen in female compared with male control rats were also seen in the diabetic animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bone calcification and calcium homeostasis in rats with non-insulin-dependent diabetes induced by streptozocin. 397 85

The development of obesity in porcine fetuses was investigated using a lean and obese strain of pigs at 80, 90, 100 and 110 d of gestation. In absolute terms, fetuses of obese gilts (FO) generally had lower carcass weight and contained less total protein, dry matter and ash than fetuses of lean gilts (FL). In relative terms (percentage of wet carcass weight) FO, compared with FL, generally had decreased percentages of water and increased percentages of protein and lipid. Comparisons based on absolute terms revealed body composition of the strains to be different at 90 d, indicating that factors responsible for obese-type growth were active before that time. Both body composition and hormone concentration differences were most pronounced at later gestation ages. Depressed growth hormone, elevated cortisol, and a tendency toward elevated insulin concentrations in fetal plasma were apparent in late gestation for FO compared with FL. These hormonal patterns are consistent with onset of obesity in FO in late gestation. Greater weights of semitendinosus and longissimus muscles were observed in FL vs FO at 90, 100 and 110 d of gestation (P less than .05). These greater muscle weights were generally accompanied by greater contents of RNA, DNA and protein in FL muscles at these same ages. However, at 80 d, FL had greater absolute DNA content in semitendinosus muscle whereas muscle weight was similar between the strains. This suggests that greater muscle weights for FL than FO were caused by more nuclei in muscle of FL. In general, indices of hypertrophy (protein/DNA) and protein synthetic capacity (RNA/DNA) of muscle were usually similar for both strains at all gestation ages. It is concluded that decreased muscle growth in late gestation of FO compared with FL is more related to fewer total nuclei and perhaps fewer myofibers than to an impaired cellular capacity for protein synthesis.
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PMID:Fetuses of lean and obese swine in late gestation: body composition, plasma hormones and muscle development. 619 43

Body composition, liver and adipose lipogenesis, and pancreatic insulin release were examined in intact and decapitated fetal pigs on d 110 of gestation. Decapitation was on d 45 of gestation. Decapitated fetuses deposited more body lipid and less body ash compared with intact fetuses. Body weight, water, dry matter and protein remained similar in intact and decapitated fetuses. Hepatic fatty acid esterification and synthesis were two- and threefold greater, respectively, in decapitated than in intact fetuses. Fatty acid synthesis in subcutaneous adipose tissue of decapitated fetuses was three times greater than values obtained in intact fetuses. The data supported the concept that substrate availability from the dam was not the rate-limiting step in fetal pig lipid synthesis and storage. High growth hormone levels in normal fetal pigs may be responsible for inhibiting lipogenesis, while fetal decapitation would remove this inhibition and be associated with greater lipid deposition. However, pancreatic insulin release was greater in decapitated than in intact fetuses; an indication that elevated lipid deposition may also be due to greater fetal insulin secretion.
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PMID:Lipogenesis and pancreatic insulin release in fetal pigs. 634 47

At 10 d of age miniature pigs were randomized to receive either of two total parenteral nutrition fuel mixes; oral feedings were discontinued. Both groups received 170 kcal X kg-1 X d-1 and 11 g X kg-1 X d-1 of synthetic amino acids. Nonprotein energy was supplied as glucose in group A, whereas in group B, it was divided equally between glucose and fat. Blood samples were drawn on the second and eighth postoperative days for hematologic, biochemical, and hormonal measurements. On the ninth postoperative day, total body water was determined and the animals were killed for carcass analysis. The animals tolerated the intravenous nutrition without ill effects as indicated by both clinical and biochemical parameters. Group A had significantly elevated levels of insulin and a higher insulin/glucagon ratio than group B. Cortisol levels did not differ significantly between groups. Total body fat, nitrogen, ash, K, Na, Cl, Ca, and P were similar between groups. TBW was significantly greater in group A compared with group B. Extracellular space calculated from body Cl and plasma Cl was similar between groups.
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PMID:Effect of different total parenteral nutrition fuel mixes on the body composition of infant miniature pigs. 642 45

A comparison was made of the amount and crystallinity of mineral deposited in the course of the arteriosclerosis in arterial walls in diabetic patients and in individuals with normal carbohydrate metabolism. The macroscopically unchanged tunica intima, fibro-lipidic plaques and bone-like lamellae were taken from aorta thoracalis , aorta abdominalis, arteriae femorales and arteriae coronariae in the course of the autopsy of 17 insulin dependent diabetic individuals and of 9 persons with arteriosclerosis, but with normal carbohydrate metabolism, called control group. The total inorganic constituents in the three kinds of samples were determined by ashing of dried samples at 600 degrees C for 6 h. Crystallinity of mineral was defined as the ratio of the spins connected with the radiation-induced stable paramagnetic centers present in the crystalline lattice of hydroxyapatite crystal, to the total ash content of the sample. An increase in the amount and in the crystallinity of deposited mineral was observed when consecutive stadia of development of arteriosclerotic lesions were compared. This phenomenon resembles the maturation of mineral observed in the course of bone development.
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PMID:Crystallinity of mineral deposited in arterial walls in the course of arteriosclerosis in diabetics and in patients with normal carbohydrate metabolism. 673 14

Newborn Yorkshire and Ossabaw (feral) pigs were examined under thermoneutral conditions to determine whether survival rate during fasting differs between these breeds and whether any blood-borne factors are associated with improved survival. Newborn pigs were removed from the sow before suckling. Body composition was determined on 10 newborn Ossabaw and 12 newborn Yorkshire pigs. Another group of animals (eight Ossabaw, 12 Yorkshire) was fasted for 72 hr, with blood samples drawn at birth and 12 and 24 hr into fasting. Glucose, free fatty acid (FFA), growth hormone (GH), insulin, thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3), cortisol and glucagon concentrations were measured in plasma of fasted pigs. Concentrations of carcass lipid, dry matter and ash were higher in newborn Ossabaw pigs than in newborn Yorkshire pigs. Survival through 72 hr of fasting was lower among Yorkshire pigs. Yorkshire and Ossabaw pigs had similar concentrations of metabolites and hormones at birth, with the exceptions of lower plasma GH and higher T3 concentrations in Ossabaw pigs. Higher plasma T3 concentrations would indicate a greater potential for fatty acid oxidation. During fasting, Ossabaw pigs had lower plasma GH and T4 concentrations and higher glucagon and FFA concentrations. Increased survival among newborn Ossabaw pigs may have been due to increased availability of FFA during fasting, and to a greater potential for gluconeogenesis through increased oxidation of fatty acids and higher plasma glucagon concentrations. This would suggest that maternal treatments that would increase storage of fat and(or) increase the capacity for oxidation of fat in utero would improve survival of newborn pigs.
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PMID:Fasting plasma hormones and metabolites in feral and domestic newborn pigs. 703 95


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