Nutrients (Dec 2023)

Pregnancy Protects against Abnormal Gut Permeability Promoted via the Consumption of a High-Fat Diet in Mice

  • Caio F. Biolcatti,
  • Vanessa C. Bobbo,
  • Carina Solon,
  • Joseane Morari,
  • Roberta Haddad-Tovolli,
  • Eliana P. Araujo,
  • Marcela R. Simoes,
  • Licio A. Velloso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15245041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 24
p. 5041

Abstract

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The consumption of large amounts of dietary fats and pregnancy are independent factors that can promote changes in gut permeability and the gut microbiome landscape. However, there is limited evidence regarding the impact of pregnancy on the regulation of such parameters in females fed a high-fat diet. Here, gut permeability and microbiome landscape were evaluated in a mouse model of diet-induced obesity in pregnancy. The results show that pregnancy protected against the harmful effects of the consumption of a high-fat diet as a disruptor of gut permeability; thus, there was a two-fold reduction in FITC–dextran passage to the bloodstream compared to non-pregnant mice fed a high-fat diet (p Clostridia, and by increased Lactobacillus murinus in the gut (p < 0.05). Thus, this study advances the understanding of how pregnancy can act during a short window of time, protecting against the harmful effects of the consumption of a high-fat diet by promoting an increased expression of transcripts encoding proteins involved in the regulation of gut permeability, particularly in the ileum, and promoting changes in the gut microbiome.

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