Flávia Spreafico Fernandes
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Featured researches published by Flávia Spreafico Fernandes.
Nutrition Reviews | 2011
Amanda Santos de Souza; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Undernutrition still affects mothers and children in developing countries and thus remains the major focus of nutritional intervention efforts. Neuronal development, which classically includes neurogenesis, migration, maturation, and synapse refinement, begins in utero and continues into the early postnatal period. These processes are not only genetically regulated but also clearly susceptible to environmental manipulation. Dietary deprivation during early life is known to have adverse effects on brain anatomy, physiology, and biochemistry, and may even lead to permanent brain damage. Although all nutrients are important for the structural development of the central nervous system, lipids such as long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially docosahexaenoic acid (22:6 n-3) and arachidonic acid (20:4 n-6), are important for normal brain development. The purpose of this literature review is to examine how early undernutrition involving a deficiency in long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids can affect brain development and function and produce deficits in spatial cognitive learning ability.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2013
Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Emilio Herrera
Prenatal and early postnatal nutritional status may predispose offspring to impaired glucose tolerance and changes in insulin sensitivity in adult life. The long-term consequences of changes in maternal dietary fatty acid composition were determined in rats. From day 1 until day 12 of pregnancy, rats were given isocaloric diets containing 9% nonvitamin fat based on soybean, olive, fish (FO), linseed, or palm oil. Thereafter, they were maintained on the standard diet; offspring were studied at different ages. Body weight at 4, 8, and 12 mo and lumbar adipose tissue and liver weights at 12 mo did not differ between females on the different diets, whereas in males the corresponding values were all lower in the offspring from the FO group compared with the other dietary groups. Plasma glucose concentrations (both basal and after an oral glucose load) did not change with sex or dietary group, but plasma insulin concentrations were lower in females than in males and, in males, were lowest in the FO group. Similar relations were found with both the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance and insulin sensitivity index. In conclusion, the intake of more n-3 fatty acids (FO diet) during early pregnancy reduced both fat accretion and age-related decline in insulin sensitivity in male offspring but not in females. It is proposed that the lower adiposity caused by the increased n-3 fatty acids during the intrauterine life was responsible of the lower insulin resistance in male offspring.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Patricia Casas-Agustench; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Francesco Visioli; Emilio Herrera; Alberto Dávalos
Diet during pregnancy and lactation influences the offspring’s health in the long-term. Indeed, human epidemiological studies and animal experiments suggest that different type of fatty acids consumption during pregnancy affect offspring development and susceptibility to metabolic disorders. Epigenetic changes are thought to be elicited by dietary factors during critical timing of development. microRNAs (miRNAs) are versatile regulators of gene expression. Thus, we aimed to determine the influence of different fatty acids on miRNA expression in offspring when given during early pregnancy. We fed pregnant either soybean (SO), olive (OO), fish (FO), linseed (LO), or palm-oil (PO) diets from conception to day 12 of gestation; and standard diet thereafter. miRNA expression was assessed in liver an adipose tissue of pregnant rats and their virgin counterparts. While liver concentrations of fatty acids in pregnant or virgin rats replicated those of the diets consumed during early pregnancy, their pups’ liver tissue marginally reflected those of the respective experimental feeds. By contrast, the liver fatty acid profile of adult offsprings was similar, regardless of the diet fed during gestation. Different parental miRNAs were modulated by the different type of fatty acid: in adult offspring, miR-215, miR-10b, miR-26, miR-377-3p, miR-21, and miR-192 among others, were differentially modulated by the different fatty acids fed during early pregnancy. Overall, our results show that maternal consumption of different types of fatty acids during early pregnancy influences miRNA expression in both maternal and offspring tissues, which may epigenetically explain the long-term phenotypic changes of the offspring.
Prostaglandins Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids | 2012
Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Míriam Badia-Villanueva; Pere Carulla; Emilio Herrera; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Pregnant rats received soybean (SO), olive (OO), fish (FO) and linseed (LO) oil diets from conception to d12 of gestation (early diets) and standard diet thereafter. At d12 and d20 the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity was evaluated in maternal adipose tissues (ATs). Fatty Acid (FA) profile was determined in maternal lumbar AT (LAT), in milk and in pups plasma and brain. LPL activity was higher in ATs at d12 than d20, all groups presenting hypertriglyceridemia at d20. At d12, the LO diet resulted higher LPL activity and incorporation of 18:3 n-3 into LAT. FA profile in maternal LAT at d20 and colostrum was similar to early diets, reflected also in FA composition of pups plasma. In FO, brain phospholipids had higher 22:6 n-3 without affecting arachidonic acid. These results suggest that specifics dietary FA in early pregnancy modulates lipid metabolism and the provision of LC-PUFA in milk and pups brain.
Clinical Nutrition | 2015
Tatiana Przybylski Ribeiro Magri; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Amanda Santos de Souza; Larissa Gutman Paranhos Langhi; Thiago Barboza; Vanessa Misan; Daniela Mucci; Raísa Magno de Araújo Ramos dos Santos; Thaiza F. Nunes; Sergio Augusto Lopes de Souza; Valeria de Mello Coelho; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
BACKGROUND & AIMS Palm oil (PO) and interesterified fat (IF) have been used to replace partially hydrogenated fat (PHF), which is rich in trans isomers, in processed foods. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether normolipidic diets containing PHF, IF, or PO consumed during pregnancy and lactation affect total body adiposity and adipose tissue morphology of adult offspring mice. METHODS Four groups of female C57BL/6 mice were fed, during pregnancy and lactation, a control diet (control group, CG), a PHF diet (trans group, TG), a PO diet (PG group), or an IF diet (IG group). After weaning (at 21 days), male pups received the control diet for 70 days. Food intake and body weight were monitored in all groups throughout the experimental period. At 3 months of age, mice were sacrificed and the inguinal (IWAT), epididymal (EWAT), retroperitoneal (RPWAT), and mesenteric (MWAT) adipose fat pads were removed and weighed. Adiposity was quantified by micro computed tomography (micro-CT), and adipocyte areas and cell number were analyzed by histology. RESULTS PG and IG offspring gained more weight than CG and TG groups (p < 0.01) during the first 10 weeks after weaning, resulting in higher final body weights (p < 0.05). IG mice and PG mice had respectively heavier EWAT and IWAT than TG and CG mice. Micro-CT scanning revealed that the total volumes of internal, external, and total fat depots were greater in IG animals, as compared to the other groups. Larger adipocyte areas were observed in EWAT and IWAT in IG and TG, respectively, in comparison to CG and PG mice. PG mice showed increased adipocyte numbers in IWAT. CONCLUSIONS Maternal intake of IF and/or PO during pregnancy and lactation predisposes the offspring to the development of obesity in adult life in mice.
Prostaglandins Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids | 2015
Daniela Mucci; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Amanda dos Santos Souza; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha; Márcia Soares-Mota; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo
Neonatal hypoxic-ischemic (HI) encephalopathy is a major cause of perinatal morbimortality. There is growing evidence that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), attenuate brain injury. This study aimed to investigate the possible neuroprotective effect of maternal intake of flaxseed, rich in DHA׳s precursor α-linolenic acid, in the young male offspring subjected to perinatal HI. Wistar rats were divided in six groups, according to maternal diet and offspring treatment at day 7: Control HI (CHI) and Flaxseed HI (FHI); Control Sham and Flaxseed Sham; Control Control and Flaxseed Control. Flaxseed diet increased offspring׳s hippocampal DHA content and lowered depressive behavior. CHI pups presented brain mass loss, motor hyperactivity and poor spatial memory, which were improved in FHI rats. Maternal flaxseed intake may prevent depressive symptoms in the offspring and promote neuroprotective effects, in the context of perinatal HI, improving brain injury and its cognitive and behavioral impairments.
Revista chilena de nutrición | 2008
Kátia Calvi Lenzi de Almeida; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Gilson Teles Boaventura; Maria Angélica Guzmán-Silva
La calidad proteica de una dieta a base de linaza fue evaluada por medio de metodos biologicos. Fueron usados 48 Rattus norvegicus, Wistar, machos, con 21 dias de vida, recien destetadas y con peso promedio de 42g. Los animales fueron divididos en 4 grupos (n=12) que recibieron, respectivamente, dieta a base de linaza adicionada de caseina, caseina, caseina con mayor concentracion de aceite y fibras para equipararse a la dieta de linaza y dieta libre de proteina. Cada dos dias fueron registrados el peso animal, el consumo de alimento y de proteina para aplicacion de los metodos de evaluacion biologica Razon de Eficiencia Proteica (PER), Coeficiente de Eficiencia Alimentaria (CEA) y Razon Proteica Neta (NPR). Al final del experimento, el valor nutricional de la dieta de linaza estuvo dentro de los valores de referencia de calidad proteica, pero no fue equivalente al de la dieta a base de caseina.
Nutrition | 2011
Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Amanda Santos de Souza; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Gilson Teles Boaventura
Lipids | 2012
Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Emilio Herrera
The FASEB Journal | 2016
Natalia Casanova Castro; Daniela Mucci; Flávia Spreafico Fernandes; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Fátima Lúcia de Carvalho Sardinha