Low birth weight is associated with altered adipose tissue deposition and regulation of leptin production. This study determined the effects of naturally occurring variations in birth weight in pigs on postnatal growth patterns, body fat depth and plasma leptin and other hormone concentrations. Low (< 1.47 kg) and high (> 1.53 kg) birth weight piglets were studied at 3 months (juvenile; n = 47) and 12 months of age (young adult; n = 17). At each age, arterial and venous catheters were inserted under general anaesthesia. Plasma leptin, cortisol, glucose, insulin and catecholamine concentrations were determined in basal blood samples. Body fat depth was measured by ultrasound at 12 months of age. Overall, adult fat depth was greater in low compared to high birth weight pigs and increased fat depth was associated with thinness at birth and poor early growth rates. These effects were strongest in females. Fat depth was related to current weight only in males. Compared to high birth weight pigs, plasma leptin concentrations were reduced in low birth weight females at 3 months and in low birth weight males at 12 months of age. This study demonstrates sex-specific effects of low birth weight on postnatal growth and body fatness and on plasma leptin concentrations in pigs. © The Physiological Society 2004.
CITATION STYLE
Poore, K. R., & Fowden, A. L. (2004). The effects of birth weight and postnatal growth patterns on fat depth and plasma leptin concentrations in juvenile and adult pigs. Journal of Physiology, 558(1), 295–304. https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2004.061390
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