Feeding of soy protein isolate to rats during pregnancy and lactation suppresses formation of aberrant crypt foci in their progeny’s colons: interaction of diet with fetal alcohol exposure

Amanda L Linz1, Rijin Xiao2, James G Parker3, Pippa M Simpson3, Thomas M Badger2, Frank A Simmen2
1Arkansas Children’s Nutrition Center, 1120 Marshall Street, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72202, USA
2Arkansas Children’s Nutrition Center, 1120 Marshall Street, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72202; Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72202, USA
3Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72202, USA
DOI: 10.1186/1477-3163-3-14

ABSTRACT

Soy protein isolate (SPI) in the diet may inhibit colon tumorigenesis. We examined azoxymethane (AOM)-induced aberrant crypt foci (ACF) in male rats in relation to lifetime, pre-weaning, or post-weaning dietary exposure to SPI and also within the context of fetal alcohol exposure. Pregnant Sprague Dawley rats were fed AIN-93G diets containing casein (20%, the control diet) or SPI (20%) as the sole protein source starting on gestation day 4 (GD 4). Progeny were weaned on postnatal day (PND) 21 to the same diet as their dams and were fed this diet until termination of the experiment at PND 138. Rats received AOM on PND 89 and 96. Lifetime (GD 4 to PND 138) feeding of SPI led to reduced frequency of ACF with 4 or more crypts in the distal colon. Progeny of dams fed SPI only during pregnancy and lactation or progeny fed SPI only after weaning exhibited similarly reduced frequency of large ACF in distal colon. Number of epithelial cells, in the distal colon, undergoing apoptosis was unaffected by diet. SPI reduced weight gain and adiposity, but these were not correlated with fewer numbers of large ACF. Lifetime SPI exposure similarly inhibited development of large ACF in Sprague Dawley rats whose dams were exposed to ethanol during pregnancy. In summary, feeding of SPI to rat dams during pregnancy and lactation suppresses numbers of large ACF in their progeny, implying a long-term or permanent change elicited by the maternal diet. Moreover, results support the use of ACF as an intermediate endpoint for elucidating effects of SPI and its biochemical constituents in colon cancer prevention in rats.