ZINC-DEFICIENCY CHANGES PREFERRED MACRONUTRIENT INTAKE IN SUBPOPULATIONS OF SPRAGUE-DAWLEY OUTBRED RATS AND REDUCES HEPATIC PYRUVATE-KINASEGENE-EXPRESSION

Citation
Kj. Kennedy et al., ZINC-DEFICIENCY CHANGES PREFERRED MACRONUTRIENT INTAKE IN SUBPOPULATIONS OF SPRAGUE-DAWLEY OUTBRED RATS AND REDUCES HEPATIC PYRUVATE-KINASEGENE-EXPRESSION, The Journal of nutrition, 128(1), 1998, pp. 43-49
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Nutrition & Dietetics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00223166
Volume
128
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
43 - 49
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3166(1998)128:1<43:ZCPMII>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Macronutrient selection patterns of male rats were analyzed using a 3- choice macronutrient selection system providing either adequate (+Zn) or deficient (-Zn) levels of zinc (30 or 1 mg Zn/kg), In study 1, rats were provided +Zn and -Zn diets for 28 d. All rats preferred carbohyd rate (>50% carbohydrate intake) at the onset, consuming an average of 71% carbohydrate (cho), 17% protein (pro), and 12% fat, By the end of the study, 25% of the -Zn rats switched preference from cho to fat, wh ereas no +Zn rats changed, In study 2, -Zn rats preferring fat increas ed their total intake to normal levels, but only 50% reverted to carbo hydrate preference after 35 d of zinc repletion, Hypothalamic concentr ations of galanin were measured in groups of +Zn and -Zn cho-and fat-p referring rats, Galanin, which may be regulated with fat intake, was n ot different in -Zn rats preferring fat vs, -Zn rats preferring cho, G alanin concentrations were higher in +Zn than in -Zn rats (P < 0.05) a nd higher in +Zn rats preferring fat than in +Zn rats preferring cho ( P < 0.05), Hepatic pyruvate kinase (PK) mRNA concentrations were relat ed to cho preference, regardless of zinc status. When PK mRNA levels w ere measured in rats consuming a single AIN-93-based diet, PK mRNA lev els were significantly reduced by zinc deficiency (P < 0.05), Because PK is highly regulated by insulin, the effect of insulin may be. reduc ed by zinc deficiency, making it more difficult for -Zn rats to catabo lize dietary cho. This may explain why some -Zn rats switched from pre ferring cho to fat after developing zinc deficiency.