Abstract :
Prenatal growth is sensitive to the direct and indirect effects of maternal dietary intake; manipulation can lead to behavioural
and physiological changes of the offspring later in life. Here, we report on three aspects of how a high-salt diet during
pregnancy (conception to parturition) may affect the offspring’s response to high oral salt loads: (i) dietary preferences for
salt; (ii) response to salt and water balance and aldosterone and arginine vasopressin (AVP) concentrations after an oral salt
challenge; (iii) concentrations of insulin and leptin after an oral salt challenge. We used two groups of lambs born to ewes fed
either a high-salt (13% NaCl) diet during pregnancy (S lambs; n512) or control animals born to ewes fed a conventional
(0.5% NaCl) diet during pregnancy (C lambs; n512). Lambs were subjected to short- (5 min) and long-term (24 h) preference
tests for a high-salt (13% NaCl) or control diet, and the response to an oral challenge with either water or 25% NaCl solution
were also carried out. Weaned lambs born to ewes fed high salt during pregnancy did not differ in their preference for dietary
salt, but they did differ in their physiological responses to an oral salt challenge. Results indicate that these differences reflect
an alteration in the regulation of water and salt balance as the metabolic hormones, insulin and leptin, were not affected.
During the first 2 h after a single salt dose, S lambs had a 25% lower water intake compared to the C lambs. S lambs had, on
average, a 13% lower AVP concentration than the C lambs (P50.014). The plasma concentration of aldosterone was higher in
the S lambs than in the C lambs (P50.013). Results suggest that lambs born to ewes that ingest high amounts of salt during
pregnancy are programmed to have an altered thirst threshold, and blunted response in aldosterone to oral salt loads
Keywords :
aldosterone , Arginine vasopressin , foetal programming , Water intake , Salt intake