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Research article2019Peer reviewedOpen access

Indication of metabolic inflexibility to food intake in spontaneously overweight Labrador Retriever dogs

Soder, Josefin; Wernersson, Sara; Dicksved, Johan; Hagman, Ragnvi; Ostman, Johnny R.; Moazzami, Ali A.; Hoglund, Katja

Abstract

BackgroundObesity in dogs is an increasing problem associated with morbidity, shortened life span and poor life quality. Overweight dogs exhibit postprandial hyperlipidaemia, highlighting the need to identify potential dysregulations in lipid metabolism. This study investigated metabolites related to lipid metabolism (i.e. acylcarnitines and taurine) and phospholipids in a feed-challenge test and aimed to identify metabolic variations in spontaneously overweight dogs. Twenty-eight healthy male Labrador Retriever dogs were included, 12 of which were classified as lean (body condition score (BCS) 4-5 on a 9-point scale) and 16 as overweight (BCS 6-8). After overnight fasting (14-17h), fasting blood samples were collected and dogs were fed a high-fat meal followed by postprandial blood sample collection hourly for 4h. Liquid chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry (LC-TOFMS) was used to identify plasma metabolites and phospholipids. Multivariate models, mixed model repeated measures and linear regression analyses were used for data interpretation.ResultsIn all dogs, propionylcarnitine, stearoylcarnitine and nine phospholipids increased in response to food intake, while vaccenylcarnitine decreased (P0.005 for all). Overall, carnitine and acetylcarnitine signal areas in the feed-challenge test were lower in overweight dogs (P0.004). Notably, fasting plasma acetylcarnitine was lower in overweight dogs than in lean dogs (P=0.001) and it did not change in response to feeding. The latter finding was in contrast to the decreased acetylcarnitine signal area found in lean dogs at one hour postprandially (P<0.0001). One fasting phosphatidylcholine (PCaa C38:4) was higher in prominently overweight dogs (BCS>6) than in lean dogs (P<0.05).ConclusionsPlasma carnitine status was overall lower in spontaneously overweight dogs than in lean dogs in this cohort of healthy Labrador Retriever dogs, indicating a potential carnitine insufficiency in the overweight group. The acetylcarnitine response in overweight dogs indicated decreased fatty acid oxidation at fasting and metabolic inflexibility to food intake. Further studies on metabolic inflexibility and its potential role in the metabolism of overweight dogs are warranted.

Keywords

Acetylcarnitine; Canine; Carnitine; Fatty-acid oxidation; Feed-challenge test; LC-TOFMS; Lipidomics; Liquid chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry; Obesity; Phospholipids

Published in

BMC Veterinary Research
2019, Volume: 15, article number: 96
Publisher: BMC