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Effects of Fortification and Enrichment of Maize Tortillas on Growth and Brain Development of Rats Throughout Two Generations
Author(s) -
Stylianopoulos Chryssanthi,
Saldívar Sergio O. Serna,
MacKinney Guillermo Arteaga
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
cereal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.558
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1943-3638
pISSN - 0009-0352
DOI - 10.1094/cchem.2002.79.1.85
Subject(s) - litter , lactation , weanling , zoology , chemistry , brain development , biology , food science , pregnancy , endocrinology , agronomy , genetics , neuroscience
ABSTRACT The growth and brain development of laboratory rats fed typical indigenous tortilla‐based diets were determined throughout two generations. The experiment compared three different types of tortilla‐based diets: regular tortillas produced from dry masa flour (RDMF), tortillas obtained from fresh masa (FM), and tortillas produced from dry masa flour fortified with 6% defatted soybean and enriched with vitamins B 1 , B 2 , niacin, and folic acid and microminerals iron and zinc (FEDMF). Female rats were mated 58 days postweaning with males belonging to the same treatment with the objective of obtaining second generation pups that were further subjected to regular lactation and 28 day postweaned growth. A comparison between growth of first and second generation rats was determined. In addition, representative animals of each physiological stage were first exsanguineted for hematocrit determination and then slaughtered with the aim of obtaining femur and brain tissues. Cerebral DNA and number of neurons were determined in each of the brains sampled. Growth of rats fed FEDMF was significantly higher ( P < 0.05) in both generations than counterparts fed RDMF or FM. The difference among treatments was more evident in second generation rats. Pregnancy rate, number of newborns per litter, litter weight, and pup's survival rate was higher for the control and FEDMF treatments. Femur growth was also higher ( P < 0.05) for first‐generation male adult rats fed control and FEDMF. The concentration and total content of cerebral DNA and number of neurons in males and females belonging to the first generation was similar. However, for second generation rats, these values were lower for animals fed regular tortilla diets. This data clearly demonstrates that the negative effects of malnutrition on brain development of pups occurred during gestation and lactation.

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