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Nutritional programming of gastrointestinal tract development. Is the pig a good model for man?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2010

Paul Guilloteau*
Affiliation:
INRA, U1079, Unité Mixte de Recherche – Système Elevage, Nutrition Animale et Humaine (UMR SENAH), Domaine de la Prise, 35590Saint-Gilles, France
Romuald Zabielski
Affiliation:
Department of Physiological Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
Harald M. Hammon
Affiliation:
Research Unit Nutritional Physiology, Leibniz Institute for Farm Animal Biology (FBN), 18196Dummerstorf, Germany
Cornelia C. Metges
Affiliation:
Research Unit Nutritional Physiology, Leibniz Institute for Farm Animal Biology (FBN), 18196Dummerstorf, Germany
*
*Corresponding author: Dr P. Guilloteau, fax +33 2 23 48 50 80, email Paul.Guilloteau@rennes.inra.fr
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Abstract

The consequences of early-life nutritional programming in man and other mammalian species have been studied chiefly at the metabolic level. Very few studies, if any, have been performed in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) as the target organ, but extensive GIT studies are needed since the GIT plays a key role in nutrient supply and has an impact on functions of the entire organism. The possible deleterious effects of nutritional programming at the metabolic level were discovered following epidemiological studies in human subjects, and confirmed in animal models. Investigating the impact of programming on GIT structure and function would need appropriate animal models due to ethical restrictions in the use of human subjects. The aim of the present review is to discuss the use of pigs as an animal model as a compromise between ethically acceptable animal studies and the requirement of data which can be interpolated to the human situation. In nutritional programming studies, rodents are the most frequently used model for man, but GIT development and digestive function in rodents are considerably different from those in man. In that aspect, the pig GIT is much closer to the human than that of rodents. The swine species is closely comparable with man in many nutritional and digestive aspects, and thus provides ample opportunity to be used in investigations on the consequences of nutritional programming for the GIT. In particular, the ‘sow–piglets’ dyad could be a useful tool to simulate the ‘human mother–infant’ dyad in studies which examine short-, middle- and long-term effects and is suggested as the reference model.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

Introduction

Programming is defined as the ‘induction, silencing or restriction of development of a permanent somatic structure or physiological system with long term effects for function’(Reference McMillen and Robinson1). This may be caused by stimuli or disturbing factors (for example, nutritional insults) acting during a sensitive time period (for example, time of maximal tissue growth) that trigger a line of consecutive events affecting fetal growth quality(Reference McMillen and Robinson1, Reference Harding2). Programming is based on the observation that environmental changes can reset the developmental pathways during critical periods of life, when the tissues still have some plasticity and are in a proliferating and differentiating phase(Reference De Moura, Lisboa and Passos3). Developmental plasticity is defined as the phenomenon by which one genotype can give rise to a range of different physiological or morphological states in response to different environmental conditions during development(Reference West-Eberhard4). This concept was introduced following epidemiological long-term studies in humans fed different diets in early life(Reference Lucas, Bock and Whelan5) and in infants suffering from intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR)(Reference Barker, Hales and Fall6) which can be defined as impaired embryonic or fetal development. Developmental changes due to nutritional programming can become permanent (but may be reversible) and can predispose the individual to lifelong health problems such as the metabolic syndrome or related diseases (such as glucose intolerance, alteration of endocrine functions, insulin resistance, CVD, hypertension, diabetes and obesity)(Reference Holemans, Aerts and Van Assche7Reference Guilloteau, Zabielski and Hammon19).

To date, reported consequences of nutritional programming are mostly studied at the metabolic level. Indeed, very few studies have addressed the gastrointestinal (GI) tract (GIT) as a target organ. Thus, first, we indicate that studies involving the GIT are needed since the GIT plays a key role in nutrient supply and has an impact on functions of the entire organism. For this, whole-animal studies are necessary, but study is hampered by the lack of reliable animal models. Second, we compare animal models to study nutritional programming and development of the GIT with particular attention to the swine species as an optimal model for man. Finally, we provide arguments for the use of the ‘sow–piglet’ dyad as a model of the human ‘mother–infant’ dyad. Our intention is to provide the reader with a critical overview of ideas rather than an exhaustive review of the literature.

Effects of nutritional programming on the gastrointestinal tract

Why is the gastrointestinal tract important?

In animal and human nutrition, the GIT is responsible for the first physiological step of bringing nutrients to the body's cells and plays a crucial role in the regulation of the development of young mammals. Within this step the diet is digested and absorbed, and the intestinal mucosa is responsible for protection from injuries derived from microbiota or undesirable substances. In mammals, the fetus receives nutrients from the maternal blood via the placenta. However, starting at about mid-gestation the fetus also receives enteral nutrition by swallowing amniotic fluid (up to 20 % of body weight (BW) per d during late gestation). Although the nutrient content is relatively low (about 1 % protein), nutrients in swallowed amniotic fluid are estimated to contribute 10–20 % of fetal energy demands(Reference Mulvihill, Stone and Debas20). The prenatal expression of nutrient transporters in the alimentary tract during the third trimester of pregnancy allows the fetus to absorb carbohydrates, amino acids and proteins from swallowed amniotic fluid(Reference Buchmiller, Fonkalsrud and Kim21, Reference Phillips, Fonkalsrud and Mirzayan22). Thus, before and mainly after birth, the GIT must be sufficiently developed, providing optimal integrity. This development continues during the postnatal period.

The GIT is formed relatively early compared with other organs, and its embryonic, fetal and postnatal development is a complex combination of growth (increase in the mass of tissues and/or in the number and size of cells) and of maturation (changes in the structure and function of cells and tissues). To illustrate this complexity, there is a close relationship between the degree of maturation and absorptive functions of the intestine. In the neonatal intestine, nutrient transport occurs along the whole crypt–villus axis, whereas in the adult intestine the absorption of nutrients is shifted to the upper part of the villi(Reference Smith23). These differences are associated with distinct populations of enterocytes lining the intestinal mucosa during perinatal development. Although GI tissues constitute only 2–6 % of BW in late gestation and at birth(Reference McPherson, Wu and Blanton24, Reference Burrin, Stoll and Jiang25), they represent a disproportionate fraction (about 10–35 %) of the whole-body O2 consumption and protein turnover(Reference Burrin, Stoll and Jiang25) because of their inherently high rates of metabolism. The large surface area of the intestine is an interface between the internal and external environments, and, in adults, the number of immune cells associated with the GIT is estimated to exceed the residual number of body cells combined(Reference Wood26). The first line of defence is the mucosa, which must prevent bacterial and viral invasion, and yet absorb nutrients(Reference Buddington27). Moreover, the GIT plays an important role in feedback regulation of its own functions as well as in neuro-hormonal regulation of the associated organs downstream to the GIT. It represents the largest endocrine organ in the body(Reference Thompson, Greely and Reyford28) and has its own nervous system (enteric nervous system). Most of the GI regulations depend on a complex regulatory system more and more recognised as a unique system with different components including hormonal, nervous and immune substances(Reference Guilloteau, Le Meuth-Metzinger and Morisset29).

After birth the placental supply of nutrients is lost and the neonatal GIT is stimulated chiefly by enteral nutritive and non-nutritive (biologically active) substances from colostrum and milk. In rats fed parenterally, BW gain is comparable with that of normally fed animals. However, the mucosal mass of the stomach, small bowel and colon is only 30–40 % of that in control animals(Reference Johnson, McCormack and Johnson30). In piglets fed a constant overall nutrient supply, the rate of protein synthesis and cell proliferation plummeted and apoptosis soared when nutrient intake was strictly intravenous as opposed to delivery by combined enteral and intravenous routes(Reference Burrin, Stoll and Jiang25, Reference Stoll, Chang and Fan31). After birth, nutrition is a critical determinant in the functional growth and maturation of the GIT while, on the other hand, fasting causes a marked intestinal atrophy in piglets and humans(Reference Alpers32). The importance of enteral nutrition was also noted, for example, in adult rats starved for 6 d in which the small intestine lost 53 % of its weight (a decrease of total intestinal cell population and RNA, protein and water content of the individual cells) as opposed to only 32 % for the whole body(Reference Steiner, Boughes and Freedman33). In addition to the provision of energy substrates and precursors for the synthesis of constitutive and secreted functional proteins, glycoproteins, nucleotides and membrane lipids, nutrients indirectly stimulate the production of endocrine as well as paracrine regulators and a variety of metabolites that modulate GI development. Although most of the amino acids derived from ingested protein are absorbed in the small intestine, protein intake may affect the colon as well, albeit in an indirect fashion, via interactions with intestinal microbiota. As a matter of fact, in adult human subjects fed a ‘standard’ normal-protein diet (70–100 g/d), 12 g nitrogenous compounds per d (proteins or peptides from ingested food, pancreatic enzymes, mucins, exfoliated cells) reached the colonic lumen(Reference Gibson, Sladen and Dawson34). Due to enzyme immaturity of the neonatal small intestine the fraction of ingested proteins reaching the colon, and the subsequent availability as substrate to be metabolised by colonic microbiota, may be even higher in infancy(Reference Gibson, Sladen and Dawson34). Increasing protein intake enhanced the faecal concentration of bacterial metabolites arising from putrefaction (ammonia, phenol compounds or polyamines) which are thought to have deleterious effects, except for polyamines which have been shown to be beneficial for epithelial cell proliferation(Reference Jänne, Alhonen and Pietilä35).

Effects of nutritional programming on the gastrointestinal tract

In nutrition studies, data concerning nutritional programming were obtained in the context of placental adaptation(Reference Godfrey36, Reference Myatt37), intra-uterine environment(Reference Fleming, Kwong and Porter38) including fetal nutrition and/or that of the pregnant mother(Reference Henriksen, Haugen and Bollerslev39Reference Bispham, Gardner and Gnanalingham43) as well as early postnatal nutrition of offspring(Reference Swenne, Crace and Milner44Reference Barbosa, Capito and Kofod48). Moreover, in mammals, the mid- and long-term effects of nutritional programming were examined at several biological levels: system functions (respiration and circulation), organs (spleen, liver and kidney), tissues (muscle and adipose tissues), as well as at cellular and molecular levels(Reference Godfrey and Barker9, Reference Armitage, Khan and Taylor10, Reference Armitage, Jensen and Taylor49, Reference Waterland50). To date, very few studies have been undertaken to explore effects on the GIT (except for the endocrine pancreas and some aspects concerning only the GIT in IUGR; see the section ‘Small for gestational age’ and Lebenthal & Young(Reference Lebenthal and Young51) for pig and rat species, respectively). Newborns from mothers fed a restricted-protein diet showed an alteration of the pancreas, more particularly in the proliferation of endocrine β-cells as well as in the size and vascularisation of the islets. As a result, the circulating insulin concentration and the stimulation of its secretion by arginine and leucine were decreased in the offspring(Reference Snoeck, Remacle and Reusens52, Reference Dahri, Snoeck and Reusens-Billen53). In addition, small-intestinal hyperplasia, and the resultant increase of total activity of disaccharidases such as sucrase and isomaltase in the entire small intestine were noted, thereby leading to postprandial hyperglycaemia in diabetes mellitus(Reference Adachi, Mori and Sakurai54).

Concerning normal development of the GIT, studies of the ontogeny of intestinal enzymes (for example, trehalase, see Gartner et al. (Reference Gartner, Shukla and Markesich55)) and hormones in rodents suggest that epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation in the intestine could be responsible for the continuity of maturation during postnatal growth. Direct evidence of the implication of epigenetic mechanisms in GIT pathology are provided by several examples in which an epigenetic deregulation is the cause of carcinogenesis(Reference Waterland50). Finally, recent data show that oral bacterial infection of pregnant mouse dams results in a methylation modification of the insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-2 gene in the placenta which could have consequences on the future development of offspring(Reference Bobetsis, Barros and Lin56).

In summary, during the perinatal period, digestive functions supply nutrients to meet the requirement of different tissues, but nutrients also can generate signals for numerous immuno-neuro-hormonal regulatory cycles. The GIT must be sufficiently developed to (1) exert digestive functions for diet components and nutrient absorption, (2) provide efficient physiological ‘selective’ function (or ‘intestinal barrier’) as well as defence functions, and (3) respond to stimuli to orchestrate regulation during digestion, absorption and metabolism. Moreover, the developmental trajectory varies between different organs and tissues and the most nutritionally important organ during early development is probably the GIT(Reference Calder, Krauss-Etschmann and de Jong57). Health, growth and wellbeing of the newborn animal and infant depend on the GIT. Taken together, because of the scarcity of data concerning nutritional programming effects on the GIT and due to their potentially important consequences, more research is needed in animal models due to the ethical constraints involved in using human subjects.

Animal models to study nutritional programming and development of the gastrointestinal tract

It is extremely difficult to perform studies in human subjects due to the multitude of ethical issues and the limitations of invasive procedures. Moreover, although the recent interest in the developmental origin of adult diseases was initiated by studies in human epidemiology, the epidemiological approach has several important limitations. Environmental conditions that affect study populations in human epidemiological studies are constantly changing. As an example, one of the most fascinating and instructive events that has led to a wealth of human epidemiological information is the Dutch Hunger Winter(Reference Stein, Susser and Saenger58). However, these observational data are difficult to evaluate in regard to the early life plane of nutrition for each individual because of a number of potential maternal confounders (exposure to cold, mental stress, strenuous activity, etc)(Reference Nathanielsz15). Carefully performed epidemiological studies(Reference Barker59, Reference Kramer, Hornstra, Uauy and Yang60) raise a number of scientific hypotheses related to the underlying mechanisms that can be investigated in animals. Experiments in animal models are relevant and essential since they are complementary with human epidemiological studies. In animal experiments it is possible (1) to evaluate health and nutrition in the population of females (and/or offspring) to be studied before and during pregnancy as well as during lactation, (2) to control food intake and environmental factors in the different groups of interest, (3) to repeat experimentation, (4) to perform invasive techniques, thereby providing multiple measurements and mechanistic data within the same animal at several stages from fetal to postnatal development(Reference Nathanielsz15).

The most frequently used animal models

Many animal models have served to study the effects of factors acting during fetal or neonatal periods and leading to a predisposition to the development of chronic diseases in adults. As reported, in vivo and in vitro experiments have been conducted in rats, mice, guinea-pigs, sheep and non-human primates(Reference Bertram and Hanson8, Reference Armitage, Khan and Taylor10, Reference Langley-Evans, Bellinger and McMullen45, Reference Lebenthal and Young51, Reference Ozanne61Reference Gauda63). Studies in rodents largely dominate the literature to date. These protocols using dietary, pharmacological, genetic and surgical models have been explored in healthy animals(Reference Bertram and Hanson8). The studies aimed to investigate mostly the effects of undernutrition and sometimes that of overnutrition(Reference Armitage, Taylor and Poston62), maternal stress and exposure to pharmacological substances(Reference Ozanne61). Nathanielsz(Reference Nathanielsz15) has presented ten fundamental principles of developmental programming in the context of physiological systems involved, and the studies in animal models that were performed to evaluate exposures, mechanisms and outcomes. In the same review, this author describes the most suitable animal models to study different functions, among a number of models that have been developed. As an example, the most widely used model of brain injury (Rice-Vannuci) is the newborn rat aged 7 d because this model has the brain maturity equivalent to that of an early third trimester human fetus. In a similar way, the non-human primate is well suited for studying the pathogenesis of perinatal infections because monkeys and man have similar immunological responses to infection. Curiously, in the field of nutritional programming, relatively few studies have used the pig as a model for man.

Most of what is known about nutrition and GIT development is mainly based on studies in ten species of mammals (rats, man, guinea-pigs, rabbits, pigs, sheep, mice, dogs, cows, cats) and two other non-mammalian vertebrates (chickens and frogs)(Reference Buddington27). In the case of the GIT, we must focus on the animal model that is most similar to man in regard to GIT function. Although the use of a comparative approach has provided valuable insights into the role of nutrition in mediating intestinal development, extrapolation of results to human fetuses and infants is limited by differences in adult diets, pattern of development and GIT characteristics as well as ethical problems.

Development of the GIT in utero is characterised by extensive structural and functional changes in the intestinal epithelium(Reference Trahair, Singled, Zabielski, Gregory and Weström64, Reference Baintner, Zabielski, Gregory and Weström65). However, there are marked differences in the stages of intestinal maturation in various mammalian species at birth. Variations in the timing and extent of intestinal maturation reflect the duration of the gestational period. Altricial species such as the mouse and rat, which are born after a short gestation, depend closely on their dams for nutrition, thermoregulation, locomotion, and evacuation of the bowels. They do not achieve independence until after weaning. In these species, adult diets are poorly tolerated until relatively late in postnatal life, and adult-type GIT functions develop rapidly after weaning. In contrast, intestinal development in precocial species that have a long gestation period such as the guinea-pig, pig and sheep occurs early in utero and major developmental events in the gut take place both before and after birth. As shown in Fig. 1, the porcine digestive enzymes resemble more closely human development in fetal and neonatal periods since, from a ‘gut point of view’, pigs like man and other primates have a precocious mode of development(Reference Pacha66, Reference Sangild67). While non-human primates may seem to provide an obvious choice, a number of serious difficulties limit their use as models for man(Reference Mitruka, Rawnsley and Vadehra68). The primates reproduce slowly (one baby per year), are expensive and are difficult to manage in the laboratory. Only a few species (20 %) are laboratory bred, and there is considerable variation among species. Last, but not least, society disapproves of using primates as laboratory animals.

Fig. 1 Ontogeny of gastric acid production and gastric, pancreatic and intestinal enzyme activities. Comparisons are between man, the pig and the rat. For each species, the larger the body, the more mature is the enzyme activity. Synthetic schema are from previous studies(Reference Henning, Rubin, Shulman and Johnson90, Reference Grand, Watkins and Torti92, Reference Jensen, Elnif and Burrin104, Reference Githens, Go, Dimagno and Gardner184Reference Fan, Adeola and Asem191).

Thus, the few data that are available from studies in non-human primates might be useful but these models are hardly accessible. Rodent models are of little help due to large differences in GIT maturation around birth and weaning between rodents and man.

Swine as a model of the human species

Pond & Mersmann(Reference Pond and Mersmann69) pointed out that the pig is similar to man in dental characteristics, renal morphology and physiology, eye structure and visual acuity, skin morphology and physiology, cardiovascular anatomy and physiology, and digestive anatomy and physiology. Previous studies have shown that body composition (expressed in percent, on a fat-free basis) is very similar in pigs and man at three stages (birth, 3 months, 3 years for pigs and 33 years for man)(Reference Moulton70). Swine are recognised as a valuable model for man in a number of biomedical studies as well as in cardiovascular, pulmonary, GIT/nutrition, renal, immunological, metabolic, embryological/fetal, neonatal and integumentary domains(Reference Phillips, Tumbleson and Tumbleson71Reference Miller and Ullrey73). The use of pigs in surgical research increased dramatically since the 1970s due to decreasing availability of dogs(Reference Swindle, Horneffer and Gardner74). In many anatomical and physiological aspects it is even closer to man than a dog. Nowadays, the pig is routinely used as the model animal to practice endoscopy and laparoscopy techniques in human GI and gynaecology surgery. For example, effects of surgical techniques in the GIT on intestinal motility were studied in a pig model and could explain the difference in recovery in patients(Reference Kiciak, Woliñski and Borycka75). Besides the large size of adult pigs, anatomical similarities to the human GIT and pancreas and similar dietary requirements make this species amenable for studying human-sized equipment and developing new techniques in pancreatic surgery. The porcine pancreas is similar in colour, texture and density and has a true capsule similar to its human counterpart. Handling of the porcine pancreas resembles the human in most aspects, making it an ideal model for surgical experimentation(Reference Truty and Smoot76). The topography of the portal vein, mesenteric vessels and duodenum is similar to that in man. Examples of functional resemblances are similar distribution of cholecystokinin (CCK) receptors and neuro-hormonal mechanisms controlling pancreatic juice secretion. The pancreatic juice drainage system is not much different, since in many pigs both main and accessory pancreatic ducts exist, though the accessory duct drains most of the porcine juice(Reference Zabielski, Leśniewska and Guilloteau77).

Pigs are omnivorous mammals and have a remarkable similarity to man in GIT anatomy, physiology, biochemistry (and even pathology)(Reference Panepinto and Phillips78Reference Rispat, Slaoui and Weber80). Thus, this species is often used in paediatric and biomedical research(Reference Domeneghini, di Giancamillo and Arrighi81, Reference Elkhaili, Salmon and Salmon82) and more generally in the field of nutrition and associated domains (digestion, absorption, metabolism, immunology) (Table 1). As an example, similar systems have been used to evaluate infant formulas and milk substitutes and to assess diets for the rehabilitation of infants from protein–energy malnutrition(Reference Miller and Ullrey73). As in man, subcutaneous fat in pigs is the largest fat depot of the body; it is anatomically similar in both species(Reference Eberhard, Hennig and Kuhla83).

Table 1 Utilisation of swine species as a model for man

* Miniature pig.

Knowledge about the progression of GIT structure and function during body development is important to validate animal models and to indicate limitations in extending results from animals to man. Thus, the chosen model must have an organ maturity similar to that of man during most of the different stages of development. This comparison has to take into account the GIT developmental time line as well as endocrine, metabolic and circulatory conditions.

Comparative gastrointestinal tract ontogeny

With respect to this term, we recognise that this theoretically could cover all events involved in the formation of a mature GIT. Here we focus on fetal and postnatal stages during which the GIT acquires its structural and functional characteristics. During the prenatal stage, for a species comparison the reference point is usually the duration of pregnancy with the different stages expressed as percentage of pregnancy duration. After birth, comparison of GIT maturation is less straightforward and we describe GIT function development at several stages according to Table 2. Thus, in most papers concerning postnatal development of the pig pancreas, gastric and small-intestinal function as well as absorption, it is generally said that the weaning time point, rather than chronological age, is a key factor in maturation. In pig production systems, the change in diet composition during weaning is abrupt and forced earlier than it would occur under natural conditions. In contrast, in man, natural weaning comprises a gradual reduction of breast milk feeding and an increased contribution of solid food slowly from 6 months up to 2–3 years of age. Surprisingly, there are no data available on GIT maturation in pigs weaned physiologically (i.e. starting at 1·5 months of age and lasting for about a 2-month period). Thus, around weaning, GIT development must be compared with caution between human and swine species.

Table 2 Approximate age and body weight (BW) values in human, pig, rat and mouse species at corresponding stages of development (data obtained from global bibliography and own observations)

Global aspects of nutrition

Both man and pigs are dependent on dietary quality (for example, amino acids, digestible carbohydrates), since symbiotic micro-organisms within the gut play a relatively small role (as compared with, for example, ruminants and horses) in modifying the nutrients that are ingested (even if there is a difference between pig and human gut size and fermentation intensity). The digesta transit time and digestive efficiencies are comparable. However, the porcine lower small intestine has a much higher microbial density and thus pigs can degrade certain indigestible carbohydrates to a higher degree than man(Reference Eberhard, Hennig and Kuhla83). Post-absorptive metabolism is also similar in many aspects(Reference Pond and Mersmann69). The wide differences in length of gestation and the number of offspring introduce a potentially significant divergence in nutrient needs for reproduction. Nevertheless, when minimum nutrient requirements of swine and established recommended daily allowances of humans are expressed per kg dietary DM (assuming an intake of 500–800 g DM per d by teenagers and adults), these values are similar(Reference Miller and Ullrey73). Thus, it is apparent that the omnivorous pig is one of the best models to study nutrition issues in the omnivorous human(Reference Miller and Ullrey73, Reference Waddell and Desai84). Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is necessary in health-compromised human infants during the peripartum phase, and neonatal and preterm piglet models have been applied to study specific effects of TPN on intestinal growth, blood flow, digestion, absorptive function, epithelial integrity, and gut barrier function(Reference Puiman and Stoll85). TPN-associated liver injury in piglets resembles that seen in the human neonate(Reference Puiman and Stoll85). Moreover, nutritional needs are very well known in the pig(86) and it is possible to precisely control intake.

At birth there are many differences between the species in respect to enterocyte morphology and macromolecule absorption(Reference Baintner87) as well as activities of pancreatic trypsin and small-intestinal dipeptidase isoforms, reflecting a greater degree of development in man compared with in pigs. This may be artificially produced by a relatively low bioactive substance intake in farm piglets since the offspring from pregnant and lactating sows fed a diet rich in PUFA (n-3 fatty acids), plant polyphenols, other antioxidants, taurine and l-carnitine showed a more advanced development of stomach and gut epithelium as compared with untreated controls (Zabielski et al. (Reference Zabielski, Gajewski and Valverde Pietra88); B Bałasin´ska, M Grabowska, J Wilczak, G Kulasek and R Zabielski, unpublished results). However, if a comparison is made between the two species at the more physiologically comparable stage of peak lactation in the mother (about 3 weeks in the piglet and 3 months in the infant), the major enzymes involved in the digestion of milk protein and the other milk components have similar activities in piglets and human infants (Fig. 1). There is another difference between the two species: at peak lactation in the mother, the gut capacity of the piglet is about double that of the human infant although the BW is similar. This difference needs to be considered when using the piglet as a model for digestion and absorption studies(Reference Darragh and Moughan89). Overall, the digestive function of the newborn piglet and human infant bear many similarities in terms of enzyme activity and digestive capacity(Reference Henning, Rubin, Shulman and Johnson90).

Recently, Dziaman et al. (Reference Dziaman, Gackowski and Różalski91) evaluated the oxidative status in healthy full-term children and piglets by urinary excretion of 8-oxoGua (8-oxoguanine) and 8-oxodG (8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine), and concentrations of vitamins A, C and E. Accordingly, healthy full-term newborns show signs of oxidative stress, and urinary excretion of 8-oxoGua and 8-oxodG was found to be a marker of oxidative stress in newborns of both species. Antioxidant vitamins, especially vitamin C, were found to play an important role in protecting newborns against stress. The neonatal blood vitamin C content depended on corresponding maternal levels and the values in cord blood were about two times higher than in the maternal blood. Taking into account differences in kinetics between the species, it was concluded that the pig is an excellent model to study oxidative stress in newborn children.

Fetal development

In both man and pigs, prenatal development in GIT function occurs mostly during the third trimester(Reference Grand, Watkins and Torti92, Reference Sangild, Schmidt and Elnif93).

Fetal development: intestinal morphometry

The processes that accompany the morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation of the intestinal mucosa are temporally and topologically highly organised when temporal changes superimpose on the spatial diversity of gene expression found along the crypt–villus and duodenal–colonic axes(Reference Pacha66, Reference Traber and Silberg94). Early crypt development is typical for man and species with a long gestation period, but not for rodents where the formation of crypts is observed only after birth. Rapid reduction of villus height and increase of crypt depth was observed during suckling and weaning periods in species with longer gestation (lambs, piglets, guinea-pigs, man). The developmental changes of surface area are influenced by rapid growth of the intestinal mucosa that is predetermined in altricial species by decreased cell turnover(Reference Pacha66).

Fetal development: digestive enzymes

In pigs the most distinct maturational changes occur for stomach acidity and chymosin concentrations, pancreatic amylase and trypsin, as well as intestinal lactase and aminopeptidase N activities (Fig. 1) as well as for intestinal absorption of glucose and protein molecules. Reviews on the ontogeny of GI functions in man show that rapid maturational changes also take place for many gut functions in human fetuses in late gestation although the exact age-related development varies widely among different functions(Reference Grand, Watkins and Torti92, Reference Sangild, Schmidt and Elnif93). When expressed as percent of the maximum value during development, sucrase (after birth) and lactase activities have a similar pattern(Reference Henning, Rubin, Shulman and Johnson90). Sucrase and maltase have often been used as marker proteins for the development of mature brush-border function in mammals(Reference Henning95, Reference Galand96), and, interestingly, these two enzymes have a similar development in pig and human species (Fig. 1).

Fetal development: active transporters

Apical transporters for amino acids and sugars can be detected at around 40 % of gestation in pigs, even earlier in man (25 % of gestation) and much later for altricial rats and mice (80 %)(Reference Buddington, Elnif and Puchal-Gardiner97). In man, active electrogenic transport of glucose is already present in the human fetal small intestine, and the duodenum-to-ileum gradient of glucose absorption is established between 17 and 30 weeks of gestation. A detailed analysis of glucose uptake across the apical membrane of fetal enterocytes demonstrated two Na+-dependent pathways differing in their affinities, whereas a single system has been found in adulthood(Reference Pacha66). Similarly, two Na+-dependent glucose transport systems have been found in porcine proximal small intestine at a comparable gestational age, which was followed by a shift to a single high-affinity transport system at birth(Reference Buddington and Malo98). In the neonatal intestine, nutrient transport occurs along the whole crypt–villus axis whereas in the adult intestine absorption of nutrients is shifted to the upper part of the villi(Reference Pacha66).

Fetal development: regulation

A co-localisation of all the major islet hormones within individual endocrine cells in both the porcine and human fetal pancreas has been shown. Furthermore, co-localisation of islet cell hormones has been demonstrated within individual granules. In the adult pancreas, however, no such co-localisation is discernible. The adult distribution and cellular composition of the endocrine pancreas in higher mammals is not attained until several months after birth(Reference Lukinius, Ericsson and Grimelius99, Reference Reddy and Elliott100). Generally, GIT endocrine cell development has been studied in pigs from fetal to adult stages and results suggest that the evolution of gut regulatory peptide production is similar in pigs and man(Reference Alumets, Hakanson and Sundler101, Reference Guilloteau, Biernat, Wolinski, Zabielski, Gregory and Weström102).

Postnatal development

GIT growth and maturation before birth prepare neonates for the abrupt transition from acquiring the majority of nutrients via the placenta and umbilical vein, mostly bypassing the intestine, to complete dependence on the intestine for processing and absorbing nutrients from milk. Just after birth, colostrum ingestion enhances disease resistance, GIT growth and maturation(Reference Zhang, Malo and Boyle103, Reference Jensen, Elnif and Burrin104). The GIT growth response to oral feeding is necessary for efficient digestion and absorption of nutrients to accommodate the nutrient demands of the developing neonate.

Postnatal development: colostrum and milk composition

Colostrum and milk contain a number of regulators (hormones and growth factors) that are crucial for early postnatal development of the GIT, the nervous system, and the entire neonatal organism (Table 3). These substances are present in milk at concentrations usually much higher than those found in maternal blood or in the blood and tissues of their offspring. Weström et al. (Reference Weström, Ekman and Svendsen105) have reported that the concentration of insulin in sows' colostrum is over 100 times greater than in maternal plasma and it drops gradually during the lactation. Blum & Hammon(Reference Blum and Hammon106) have demonstrated similar patterns in regard to insulin, prolactin and IGF-1 in bovine colostrum and milk. High concentrations of insulin and IGF-1 in colostrum and milk coincide with intensive growth of the intestinal mucosa and pancreas tissue just after birth(Reference Svendsen, Weström and Svendsen107). In contrast, rat colostrum contains lower concentration of regulators as compared with early lactation milk(Reference Berseth, Lichtenberger and Morriss108). Colostrum, milk hormones and growth factors seem to be particularly important in neonates to support their neuroendocrine function and regulate the development of GIT structure and function until the neonate's own endocrine system achieves maturity. The degradation of hormones and growth factors by digestive juices occurs to a much lower degree in neonate and suckling than in weaned or adult animals(Reference Read, Gale, George-Nascimento, Goldman, Atkinson and Hanson109Reference Xu and Wang111). Differences in colostrum and milk composition between species and responses to milk-borne bioactive components may be expected due to ontogenic development of tissues and organs(Reference Blum and Baumrucker112). In whey samples of human, cow and sow colostrum the insulin concentrations were high and changed similarly on the day before and at parturition. On the day after delivery insulin concentration remained high in human and sow colostrum but in cows it decreased to one-twelth compared with the level at parturition(Reference Novak and Novak113). In conclusion, the data presented demonstrate a similar developmental pattern for GIT growth factor concentration in human and sow colostrum and milk which may suggest similar controlling pathways during early postnatal development.

Table 3 Immunoglobulin, hormone and growth factor concentrations in human and sows' colostrum and milk*

IGF, insulin-like growth factor; EGF, epidermal growth factor.

* No data are available on glucagon-like peptide in colostrum and milk in any of the mammalian species.

Postnatal development: gut closure and macromolecule absorption

Gut closure is the process whereby macromolecules cease to be absorbed. It occurs in pigs after birth whereas in man there is some evidence that it occurs in early to mid-gestation if it occurs at all(Reference Henning, Rubin, Shulman and Johnson90, Reference Sangild114, Reference Widdowson115). This process depends on factors such as epithelial maturation or increased intraluminal proteolysis. After birth, cessation of macromolecule transfer across the intestine progresses rapidly to completion at approximately 24–72 h in newborn piglets but is delayed until several weeks after birth in rats and mice(Reference Sangild, Trahair and Loftager116). From a physiological point of view, the transport of macromolecules such as growth factors and IgG is crucial for ungulates such as piglets that are born nearly without γ-globulins but are capable of transferring intact immunoglobulins from ingested colostrum to the circulation during the first postnatal days(Reference Weström, Ohlsson and Svendsen117). In human infants IgG is mainly transferred by the placenta during late gestation; nevertheless, those which are born more or less hypoglobulinaemic also receive IgG passively from the maternal milk through proximal intestine absorption, but in lesser quantity than in swine species(Reference Pacha66) (Table 3). The effective transport of ingested functional proteins is facilitated by decreased proteolytic degradation due to the presence of colostral protease inhibitors. In contrast to ungulates, rat and rabbit milk has a relatively low protease inhibitor capacity(Reference Pacha66).

The intestine of altricial species contains fetal-type enterocytes equipped with apical tubular systems and endocytotic complexes until weaning when the immature vacuolated enterocytes are replaced by mature non-vacuolated cells(Reference Klein and Lebenthal118). In ungulates, massive non-selective endocytosis and transport of all intraluminal macromolecules take place during the first 2 postnatal days, and immunoglobulins compete with other proteins. In newborn pigs, guinea-pigs and hamsters, the transport capacity decreases rapidly within the first postnatal days, whereas the transfer is terminated around 21 d after birth in rats and rabbits(Reference Pacha66).

Postnatal development: organ development, motility and digestive enzymes

Piglets are slightly less mature at birth than human neonates in several aspects including the digestive system and body composition (piglets have a lower body fat content)(Reference Puiman and Stoll85, Reference Shulman119). However, during the neonatal period, protein deposition is very rapid and owing to similarities of postnatal nutrition and intestinal development to man, the piglet can be viewed as an accelerated model of postnatal growth and development(Reference Sangild67). The pig stomach increases in weight by 28 % during the first 24 h and it continues to grow but less intensively in the following 9 d. By day 10, its weight is 3·5-fold higher than at birth. It has been reported also that during the first 24 h the stomach grows more rapidly than the body as a whole(Reference Widdowson115). In piglets aged 12–27 d, the antral and duodenal electrical control activity frequencies are similar to values reported in human adults and the migrating myoelectric complex is slightly shorter. Globally, the neonatal piglet model is reproducible and has similarities to the human infant's GI physiology(Reference Groner, Altschuler and Ziegler120). The human, pig and rodent GIT enzymic development is reported in Fig. 1, showing that the pig is nearer to man than rodent species. Lingual lipase is quantitatively the most important lipase for digestion of fat in suckling infants and piglets(Reference Widdowson115).

Postnatal development: absorption

With a few exceptions, the total intestinal transport capacity increases with age due to the increase of intestinal mass, but the transport rate for most carbohydrates and amino acids studied so far decreases relative to the increase in intestinal weight. In pigs this decline may reach 50 % of the initial values. Fructose absorption follows quite a different developmental pattern, since it increases in the small intestine during weaning in rats and rabbits, but a smaller increase has been found in pigs(Reference Pacha66). Because juvenile pigs are able to modulate brush-border hydrolases and transporters in response to changes in diet composition, the capacities for adaptive modulation must be acquired at, or shortly after, weaning. There is no information on when human infants acquire the capacities for adaptive modulation of intestinal functions(Reference Buddington27).

Postnatal development: immune system

Standard pigs and miniature pigs may be a cost-effective experimental compromise compared with studies in rodents and non-human primates and a valuable addition to observations on the developing immune system in man(Reference Rothkötter, Sowa and Pabst121). Development of the mucosal immune system occurs with age, but is strongly influenced by environmental factors including microbial colonisation and exposure to specific antigens. Thus, relatively little development of the mucosal immune system occurs in neonatal piglets in the absence of a commensurate microbiota. Similarly, epidemiological evidence in human infants has also suggested that exposure to microbiota and potential pathogens is associated with decreased risk of allergic diseases(Reference Bailey, Haverson and Inman122). In this context Jaworek et al. (Reference Jaworek, Leja-Szpak and Nawrot-Porabka123) provided evidence that pretreatment of rat neonates with low doses of the lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) component of the cellular wall of Gram-negative bacteria reduced gene expression of CCK1 receptor and showed impaired exocrine pancreatic function at adult age. Exposure of suckling rats to bacterial endotoxin attenuated acute pancreatitis induced in these animals at adult age and this effect was attributed to the increased concentration of the antioxidative enzyme superoxide dismutase in the pancreatic tissue as well as modulation of the production of a number of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. This work provides impetus for further studies aiming to counteract the problems related to immune system malfunction.

Postnatal development: regulation

In man and swine, the small intestine is relatively mature at birth. Correspondingly, intestinal maturation appears most glucocorticoid-sensitive in the late fetal and early neonatal period, in association with a peak of circulating levels of glucocorticoids at this time(Reference Sangild, Schmidt and Elnif93). Pancreatic secretion in human neonates is low, but the pancreas responds to nutritional stimulation from the first days of life, and can adapt its response to changes in milk formula composition(Reference Zoppi, Andreotti and Pajno-Ferrara124). In pigs, as in man, functional parameters of pancreatic juice (normalised to BW), such as volume, protein concentration, trypsin concentration, and response to feeding and secretagogues, are all low before weaning and increase thereafter(Reference Githens125). The ability of secretin to increase fluid secretion is present at the time of birth, but CCK did not increase the concentration (units/mg proteins or units/ml) of amylase, trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase or lipase in duodenal aspirates at 1 d or 1 month, but did so in children aged 2 years or older(Reference Githens125). In suckling pigs with catheterised pancreas, the secretion of pancreatic juice and enzyme output in response to exogenous secretin+CCK was small, but significantly increased after weaning(Reference Pierzynowski, Weström and Svendsen126). No such data are available in humans. The response to stimulation in adolescents and adults seems to depend on the neonatal background. As mentioned above, pretreatment of rat neonates with low doses of lipopolysaccharide has an impact on neuro-hormonal mechanisms controlling the exocrine pancreas in adulthood, resulting in reduced enzyme responses toward hormonal stimulation(Reference Jaworek, Leja-Szpak and Nawrot-Porabka123).

In summary, numerous species have been used as a model for man in research of nutrition and developmental programming. Rodent species are the most frequently used, even if they seem not the most suitable model concerning the GIT. In contrast, gut physiology and GIT development (growth and maturation) in pigs are closer and often similar to that of man in many features during fetal and postnatal development. Some differences are noticed (gut closure, materno-fetal transfer of immunity) but these differences do not seem to compromise the pig as a model.

The sow–piglet dyad as a model for understanding nutritional programming in the human mother–infant dyad

In view of the incidence of obesity worldwide there is increasing interest in the extent to which body composition, both in the short and long term, differs in infant and children born with a very low or a very high BW. This is because a growing number of studies have linked low BW and fetal growth restriction to an increased risk for chronic diseases in adulthood that often are obesity-related. In addition, there is also evidence to suggest that heavy infants may be at increased risk for obesity and associated diseases in later life(Reference Hediger, Overpeck and Kuczmarski127). In human infants, low BW or small for gestational age (SGA) is defined as a BW < 2·5 kg at full term (or < 10th percentile of Lubchenco charts)(Reference Lubchenco128); it concerns neonates who have experienced IUGR and does not include preterm neonates who also present a low BW(Reference Kramer, Hornstra, Uauy and Yang60). Large BW or large-for-gestational-age (LGA) is defined as a BW>3·5 kg (or>90th percentile). Both populations are compared with infants born with normal BW status, appropriate for gestational age (AGA).

Similarly, in pigs the newborn population can be divided into three groups, and the same classification of birth weight of human infants can be applied to pig species. Based on data of 12 041 piglets from 965 litters (generated from 168 Large White × Landrace crossbred sows) Quiniou et al. (Reference Quiniou, Dagorn and Gaudré129) showed that the piglet population at birth follows a normal distribution and can be classified as SGA or IUGR (0·6 to 1·0 kg or < 11th percentile), LGA (>1·5 kg or>85th percentile) and AGA (>1·0 kg and < 1·5 kg) (Fig. 2). This classification is precise for a large population of newborn piglets as is the case for human neonates. However, this percentile classification cannot be applied to a single litter because birth weights do not follow a normal distribution. This means that a classification of SGA or LGA piglets must be based on the absolute value of birth BW for the considered breed.

Fig. 2 Distribution of piglets according to birth weight (BW; kg). The figure is based on data obtained from a population of 12 041 piglets from 965 litters(Reference Quiniou, Dagorn and Gaudré129). (■), Total born piglets; (), live-born piglets.

Small for gestational age or intra-uterine growth retardation

Over the last 50 years several studies have reported the occurrence and phenotype of the low-BW or runt piglet using terms including IUGR and SGA(Reference Bakketeig130, Reference Finch, Antipatis and Pickard131) or it can be defined by using the several criteria suggested(Reference Royston, Flecknell and Wootton132Reference Mamelle, Cochet and Claris134). The utilisation of the low-BW piglet as a model for IUGR is not a recent idea(Reference Wang, Chou, Chen, Xu and Cranwell135), but then was suggested by other authors(Reference Wang, Chou, Chen, Xu and Cranwell135Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138).

Naturally occurring and environmentally induced IUGR is well documented for livestock, including cattle, goats, horses, pigs and sheep. Despite improvement of management techniques and research on nutrient requirements, IUGR remains a significant problem in livestock production because of our incomplete knowledge concerning the impact of nutrition on the mechanisms regulating fetal growth. In an elegant review, Wu et al. (Reference Wu, Bazer and McFadyen139) have examined these phenomena (causes and consequences) and the mechanisms involved (including fetal programming) and presented several potential solutions to prevent IUGR. In human medicine, runt piglets have been used in studies of very low BW and its consequences(Reference Cooper140).

In our opinion, the most promising model for the ‘human mother–infant’ dyad is the ‘sow–piglet’ dyad. This model allows studying the effects of nutritional programming on the development of GIT functions (Table 4). In the following we present data on how IUGR affects development and health mainly in piglets and, wherever data are available, comparison is made with man.

Table 4 Studies examining the effects of intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR) on several parameters

GIT, gastrointestinal tract; SGA, small for gestational age; AGA, appropriate for gestational age.

Weight and length of organs

IUGR piglets need more time to reach a similar BW than AGA piglets. For instance, 23 extra days are necessary for Yorkshire or Yorkshire crossbred IUGR pigs to reach 107 kg of BW(Reference Hegarty and Allen141, Reference Powell and Aberle142). IUGR in piglets does not have a uniform effect on all internal organs. In newborns, the relative weights of internal organs (salivary glands, stomach, small intestine, colon, liver, spleen, kidneys and heart) are lower in IUGR compared with normal piglets(Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138, Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143). This suggests that mass accretion of different organs of the IUGR fetus during pregnancy was symmetrically restricted(Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John136Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138, Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143). The length of the small intestine relative to BW in IUGR pigs is 23–55 % greater than that in normally grown animals and the small-intestinal weight:small-intestinal length ratio is only 61–76 % of that of normal pigs. This suggests that the effect on intestinal weight is greater than that on intestinal length(Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138, Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143).

Stomach

The thickness of the stomach wall and muscularis externa is less in IUGR piglets compared with controls, and the depth of gastric glands is decreased, but the percentage of gastric mucosa occupied by parietal cells is the same(Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138). The gastric pits in IUGR piglets are deeper than those of normal piglets, and hyperplasia is clearly evident around the gastric pits in IUGR piglets, indicating deceased wall protection(Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143).

Pancreas

IUGR appears to have a severe effect on the pancreas, which was smaller in size relative to BW. This seems to be due to reduced cell numbers, as indicated by the lower DNA content, and decreased acinar cell size, as confirmed by histological examination. The lower protein:DNA ratio could reflect smaller cell size, fewer zymogen granules stored within the cytoplasm or less protein synthesis by the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Adding the lower lipase activity, all these data indicate an impairment of pancreatic exocrine cell function associated with IUGR(Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138). This is in agreement with reports in infants with IUGR where trypsin and mainly lipase activities decrease in duodenal juice(Reference Boehm, Bierbach and Senger144). Faecal chymotrypsin concentration is lower(Reference Kolacek, Puntis and Lloyd145), suggesting that activities of these last enzymes can be a limiting factor for optimal digestion.

Small intestine

IUGR is associated with a proportionately greater length but thinner small-intestinal wall. The small-intestinal surface in IUGR piglets is reduced compared with in normal pigs mainly due to a lower average number of villi per unit of area and a lower height of the villi(Reference Xu, Mellor and Birtles138, Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143, Reference Widdowson146). In contrast, intestinal crypts are deeper in IUGR piglets (P Guilloteau, M Mickiewicz, CC Metges and R Zabielski, unpublished results). Consequently, the loss of intestinal absorptive area is associated with the precocious occurrence of maltase and sucrase activity in the mucosa, although the specific lactase activity per unit tissue mass is not affected(Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John137). The size of the villi seems not to be a reliable marker of gut maturation, since the level of food intake affects villus size but without major effects on maturation(Reference Marion, Petersen and Rome147).

Metabolism

Both the rate of glucose utilisation and the total body-glucose pool size are reduced in IUGR piglets, but they seem to be appropriate for their reduced BW(Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John137). In a number of studies in SGA pigs, Poore & Fowden(Reference Poore and Fowden148Reference Poore and Fowden150) have demonstrated the negative effects of low birth weight on glucose metabolism and body composition in juvenile and young adult pigs. Our own studies demonstrated that glucose tolerance was impaired in adolescent pig offspring born to sows fed an inadequate level of dietary protein during gestation(Reference Metges, Lang and Goers151). In a Finish survey, SGA infants who had a BW in the highest quartile at 3 and 6 months of age had a 1·5-fold risk of type 1 diabetes later in childhood(Reference Hyppönen, Kenward and Virtanen152).

Body composition

Body composition in normal piglets has been studied(Reference Shields, Mahan and Graham153) and can be used as a reference. At a similar adult BW, IUGR and control piglets show similar length of three bones (femur, tibia and fibula)(Reference Hegarty and Allen141). The growth potential of some of the skeletal muscles of the IUGR pigs appears to be limited by the apparent decreased number of muscle fibres and by the physiological limits on fibre hypertrophy. Long term, the muscles of the IUGR piglets seem more mature than in controls. This observation is confirmed by a greater quantity of intramuscular fat. Thus, in utero development associated with the generation of IUGR pigs results in postnatal effects on growth and composition of some porcine muscles(Reference Hegarty and Allen141, Reference Wigmore and Stickland154, Reference Bauer, Walter and Brust155).

Regulation

Elevated plasma gastrin and somatostatin levels in infants with GIT diseases when compared with normal infants(Reference Marchini, Lagercrantz and Milerad156) could explain, in part, some observations in GIT modifications. The expression levels of growth hormone receptors and insulin receptors tend to decrease and that of IGF-1 in IUGR piglets is lower than that in normal pigs. This might be related to lower insulin and growth hormone levels in plasma(Reference Wang, Huo and Shi143). Notwithstanding the reported association of IUGR with later developmental disorders and increased health risks, birth weight is just one parameter to measure intra-uterine development. This has to be considered in view of the fact that effects of nutritional programming have been described without association to IUGR(Reference Budge, Gnanalingham and Gardner157).

Large for gestational age

Fewer scientific reports are available on the effects of LGA in human neonates and piglets than for SGA or IUGR. However, a growing body of evidence from epidemiological studies in human subjects suggests that a high BW at birth (mainly offspring of obese women(Reference Knip and Akerblom158)) has health consequences during later life. As an example, heavy BW during infancy has been implicated as a risk factor for type 1 diabetes(Reference Kurishita, Nakashima and Kozu159, Reference Leung and Lao160). Mothers of LGA babies have a higher level of glycated Hb (HbA1c) of dense erythrocytes and a higher maternal BMI, which are independent factors that affect fetal oversize. LGA infants may be a consequence of maternal hyperglycaemia in late pregnancy which is not detected by the routine screening test for gestational diabetes mellitus(Reference Budge, Gnanalingham and Gardner157).

A study of Japanese newborns found the morbidity rate of newborns excluding idiopathic hyperbilirubinaemia to be 10 %, which increased with gestational age and was accompanied by an increment of birth trauma. The main causes of hospitalisation of LGA neonates are associated with difficulty at delivery due to their heavy weight. In addition, neonates of BW over 3·75 kg have a higher morbidity rate(Reference Watanabe161).

In a population of 190 children (age 9 years) of known height, weight and size at birth, the highest urinary excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites was found in children who were either light (SGA) or heavy (LGA) at birth. These findings suggest that the intra-uterine environment, as measured by fetal size at birth, has long-lasting effects on the function of the hypothalamo–pituitary–adrenal axis(Reference Clark, Hindmarsh and Shiell162). Body composition was examined in infants and young children, aged 2–47 months(Reference Hediger, Overpeck and Kuczmarski127). The LGA infants remained larger in size through early childhood but the discrepancies in BW are primarily attributable to differences in lean body mass (muscularity), since fatness was less affected. Thus, based on the fatness indicators used at any given BW for these infants and children, percentage of body fat appears to be relatively lower for children who were LGA at birth(Reference Hediger, Overpeck and Kuczmarski127).

In regard to long-term effects, an epidemiological study in adults (18 years) observed a positive association between birth length and adult BW that was stronger than between birth BW and adult BW. These associations appear the strongest among individuals born at gestational age 39 to 41 weeks. Length and BW at birth each contribute independently to adult stature and BW. The increase in adult BW per relative BW category was greatest for infants who are born heavy and long at birth(Reference Eide, Øyen and Skjaerven163). Moreover, early postnatal growth is strongly influenced by BMI at birth(Reference Adair164), but large BW newborns become fat adolescents only when their mother or father is also overweight or fat (i.e. has either a high BMI or large skinfold thickness), suggesting that fatness during adolescence is related to parental fatness but not to prenatal fatness(Reference Frisancho165). High birth BW of women could increase the incidence of breast cancer after delivery; thus, there is evidence of greater risk with greater BW or BW ≥ 3–3·5 kg v. BW < 3·5–3·75 kg(Reference Wohlfahrt and Melbye166Reference Potischman and Troisi168). These results suggest that the effect of birth BW on breast cancer risk may be modulated by childhood events(Reference Stavola, Hardy and Kuh167) and are compatible with the hypothesis that the hormonal level during pregnancy influences the risk of breast cancer in the years closely following delivery(Reference Wohlfahrt and Melbye166).

Our objective in this part of the review is to suggest the ‘LGA piglet–sow’ dyad as a model of the human ‘LGA mother–infant’ dyad to study the effects of nutritional programming at short, medium and long term in the development of GIT functions. In the pig, no studies have been reported in regard to the GIT for LGA since IUGR is among the most important problems related to pig production. More generally, to our knowledge, there are almost no studies on nutritional programming of offspring from overweight sows on one hand and studies on long-term effects of being LGA are missing on the other hand. Only two studies came to our attention evaluating the effect of high birth weight on later health and performance. Gwatkin & Annau(Reference Gwatkin and Annau169) have compared resistance of light and heavy birth BW pigs to rhinitis under natural conditions. More recently, Wolter et al. (Reference Wolter, Ellis and Corrigan170) have evaluated the effect of weaning weight as affected by birth BW and feeding a supplemental liquid milk replacer diet during lactation on pig performance from weaning to a common slaughter weight. Thus, to date the comparison between the two species is not possible. Thus, we suggest more experimentation in this field to obtain data in swine and to verify that the results are in agreement with the hypothesis coming from epidemiological studies dealing with LGA infants.

Other benefits and limitations of swine and the ‘sow–piglet’ dyad

Nutrient needs are well known for healthy humans and pigs(86, 171). As an example, distribution of a protein-enriched supplemental diet to IUGR infants permits catch-up growth which is believed to be beneficial for the nervous system but which could result in the appearance of nutritional diseases in the adult. Thus, after the characterisation of the abnormal type of BW (SGA and LGA), it would be useful to perform experiments with the objective of determining adequate nutrient needs for these populations.

Relative to man, pigs have a shorter gestation (114 d), and produce large litters with the result that piglets from the same litter can be divided among several experimental groups. Sows have two or more gestations per year with a relatively long duration of gestation and fetal and neonatal development closer to human than altricial species. As shown in Table 2, the generation cycle (pregnancy and offspring development to adult stage) is relatively short (1 year). Thus, the pig model allows exploration of nutritional programming at short, mid and long term as well as the mechanisms involved including the intergenerational effects.

The pig has the added benefit of a body size that allows surgical manipulation and a GIT that is relatively easy to handle. In considering ethical aspects, the utilisation of pig models presents fewer constraints as compared with using non-human primates. The pig species offers the advantage of having a GIT that is large enough to be fistulated/cannulated to permit studies in vivo over a long time in the same animal. It allows the collection of adequate samples (quantity and quality) of tissues, GIT contents, and blood at different fetal and postnatal developmental stages with several animals to compare treatments since conventional pigs are not expensive.

Modern swine breeds are generated by long-term genetic selection, with the objective to obtain maximal performance in terms of meat quantity and quality. The rapid growth and mature size of these animals could be limiting factors for the porcine model (90–120 kg and 330–450 kg at age 6 months and at adult stage, respectively)(Reference Rispat, Slaoui and Weber80, Reference Panepinto and Phillips172). As an example, a Large White pig weighing 100–120 kg represents an adolescent rather than an adult model (Table 2). Utilisation of minipigs with an adult BW of 70–120 kg(Reference Elkhaili, Salmon and Salmon82) could be a useful alternative, since compared with conventional pigs, minipigs are easier to handle but currently more expensive. As an example, this model has been used to study the effects of trypsin inhibitors on protein digestibility, to compare the protein flow of endogenous and microbial origin and to estimate ileal digestibility of amino acids for feed evaluation(Reference Hennig, Metges and Berk173).

During pregnancy, maternal–fetal exchanges occur via the placenta, which is different in swine (epitheliochorial) in comparison with man (haemochorial, as in rodent species). The human placenta is more permeable than that of the swine. However, Père(Reference Père174) has compared maternal–fetal exchanges and utilisation of nutrients by the fetus in several species (rat, guinea-pig, ruminant, swine and man) but could not suggest a suitable model for man. Nevertheless, in pregnant sows, maternal–fetal nutrient exchanges can be quantified through probes and catheters inserted into the umbilical vein and femoral artery (fetus) on one hand and/or in the uterine artery and vein (fetus+placenta) on the other hand. During the 2 weeks preceding birth, this procedure permits the estimation of the quantity and quality of the nutrients supplied to the fetus and their effective utilisation(Reference Père175, Reference Père176). Such techniques can be applied to AGA, IUGR and LGA fetuses since they can be easily identified in the uterine horns during surgical intervention. To use all these techniques in one study is difficult and can be simplified by only using catheters (blood sample collections), since blood flow rates are available from other studies during several stages of pregnancy(Reference Père and Etienne177).

Scientists now have new tools such as genomic, proteomic and metabolomic techniques. This makes it possible to elucidate and analyse simultaneously several thousands of genes implicated in multifactorial metabolic ways concerning the biological effects of nutrients on cellular functions as well as their consequences for neuro-immuno-hormonal regulatory mechanisms, in individuals and their descendents(Reference Go, Allison and Go178, Reference German and Young179). Currently, in the literature it is easier to find examples in the rat species. A study of gene expression in aorta tissue from offspring of female rats fed a lipid-enriched diet resulted in alteration in the expression of more than 200 mRNA sequences; among these were genes that coded for collagen, elastin and NO synthetase(Reference Armitage, Taylor and Poston62, Reference Taylor, Taylor and McConnell180).

In summary, at birth piglets can be classified according to BW in three main classes (AGA, SGA or IUGR and LGA) in a similar way as in human neonates representing three types of intra-uterine development. It seems clear that the pattern of growth retardation in the naturally occurring IUGR piglet is very similar to that which occurs naturally in the IUGR human neonate(Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John136, Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John137, 171Reference Bauer, Walter and Hoppe183). This is of some practical importance in view of the dearth of suitable animal models for the investigation of health problems associated with IUGR in infants(Reference Flecknell, Wootton and John136, Reference Cooper140). In the literature, few data are reported concerning the effects of LGA. Some examples show that this phenomenon can be deleterious for the offspring, suggesting that it should be further investigated. Moreover, the particularities of swine provide many opportunities to research the effects of nutritional programming that are not present in the human species. Indeed, the ‘sow–piglet’ dyad could be a useful tool to simulate the ‘human mother–infant’ dyad in studies which examine short-, mid- and long-term effects.

Conclusion

The programming concept is based on results of epidemiological studies in human subjects. Many experiments in animals (mainly using rodents as the model) have been performed to verify this hypothesis. Most of them confirm the hypothesis but others do not. Rodents belong to altricial species, which are considered not suitable as a model for man in regard to the GIT. Since most of the experiments cannot be performed in human subjects, more adequate animal models are necessary and the pig seems to be most appropriate for these purposes.

The statistical distribution of birth BW is similar in both swine and human species. With respect to nutritional programming in man, both the IUGR as well as the LGA offspring carry a higher risk for health problems later in life (short-, mid- and long-term effects). In swine, these extreme birth BW can naturally occur because of its multiparous nature. Pigs and man have many similarities in the general structure of the GIT, the digestive functions of GIT segments, and in the control of development and functions of the digestive system. In swine, we have access to three classes of piglets (AGA, IUGR or SGA and LGA) often in the same litter, providing a chance to reduce genetic effects. Nevertheless, one has to keep in mind that birth weight is a rather crude parameter reflecting intra-uterine developmental conditions.

From a GIT point of view, the utilisation of the ‘sow–piglet’ dyad as a model of the human ‘mother–infant’ dyad seems appropriate when studying the effects of nutritional programming. Some data can be found in the literature concerning GIT development around birth in the IUGR piglet, but only very few data are available at other stages of life and data are missing for high-birth-weight piglets. First, it appears that GIT development must be characterised in SGA and LGA in comparison with normal birth BW. Second, it is necessary to study the implication of nutritional programming for the GIT (ingestion, digestion, absorption, selection, defence, regulation, etc) and to understand the mechanisms implicated. Since the GIT is of paramount importance to nutrient uptake and due to the lack of data on long-term effects of nutritional programming in the GIT, effects due to early-life nutrition must be explored in this organ system.

The results obtained from the suggested research, associated with the data currently available, will give us a better understanding of some of the biological mechanisms that explain, at least in part, the observational association between nutritional programming and resulting morbidities in adults such as hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, obesity and diabetes. Eventually, this knowledge will also lead to nutritional recommendations and therapies for prevention and treatment after validation in human subjects.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge support by grants obtained in the frame of Procope (no. 17823VL and no. D/0707555; German Academic Exchange Service, Bonn, Germany) and Polonium (no. 13968PE) programmes which have highly facilitated the collaboration between the three research teams.

The authors greatly acknowledge Professor J. H. Burton (University of Guelph, Toronto, Canada) for the English revision of the manuscript.

P. G. was the initiator of the review and all authors contributed equally to the preparation of this paper.

There are no conflicts of interest.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Ontogeny of gastric acid production and gastric, pancreatic and intestinal enzyme activities. Comparisons are between man, the pig and the rat. For each species, the larger the body, the more mature is the enzyme activity. Synthetic schema are from previous studies(90,92,104,184191).

Figure 1

Table 1 Utilisation of swine species as a model for man

Figure 2

Table 2 Approximate age and body weight (BW) values in human, pig, rat and mouse species at corresponding stages of development (data obtained from global bibliography and own observations)

Figure 3

Table 3 Immunoglobulin, hormone and growth factor concentrations in human and sows' colostrum and milk*

Figure 4

Fig. 2 Distribution of piglets according to birth weight (BW; kg). The figure is based on data obtained from a population of 12 041 piglets from 965 litters(129). (■), Total born piglets; (), live-born piglets.

Figure 5

Table 4 Studies examining the effects of intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR) on several parameters