Effect of mild restriction of food intake on gene expression profile in the liver of young rats: Reference data for in vivo nutrigenomics study

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Abstract

Recent transcriptomics studies on the effect of long-term or severe energy restriction (ER) have revealed that many genes are dynamically modulated by this condition in rodents. The present study was conducted to define the global gene expression profile in response to mild ER treatment. Growing rats were fed with reduced amount of diet (5-30% ER) for 1 week or 1 month. Using DNA microarray analysis of the liver, seventy-two genes that were consistently changed through the different ER levels were identified. Many were related to lipid metabolism including genes encoding key enzymes such as carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 and fatty acid synthase. Interestingly, a number of genes were altered even by 5% ER for 1 week where no differences in weight gain were observed. The information obtained in the present study can be used as a valuable reference data source in the transcriptomics studies of food and nutrition in which subtle differences in food intake sometimes hinder appropriate interpretation of the data. © The Authors 2010.

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Saito, K., Ohta, Y., Sami, M., Kanda, T., & Kato, H. (2010). Effect of mild restriction of food intake on gene expression profile in the liver of young rats: Reference data for in vivo nutrigenomics study. British Journal of Nutrition, 104(7), 941–950. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114510001625

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