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Dietary saturated fat and docosahexaenoic acid differentially effect cardiac mitochondrial phospholipid fatty acyl composition and Ca 2+ uptake, without altering permeability transition or left ventricular function
Author(s) -
O'Connell Kelly A.,
Dabkowski Erinne R.,
Fatima Galvao Tatiana,
Xu Wenhong,
Daneault Caroline,
Rosiers Christine,
Stanley William C.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.1002/phy2.9
Subject(s) - docosahexaenoic acid , phospholipid , saturated fat , mitochondrion , mitochondrial permeability transition pore , medicine , polyunsaturated fatty acid , endocrinology , fatty acid , arachidonic acid , inner mitochondrial membrane , biology , saturated fatty acid , biochemistry , chemistry , cholesterol , membrane , apoptosis , programmed cell death , enzyme
Abstract High saturated fat diets improve cardiac function and survival in rodent models of heart failure, which may be mediated by changes in mitochondrial function. Dietary supplementation with the n3‐polyunsaturated fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid ( DHA , 22:6n3) is also beneficial in heart failure and can affect mitochondrial function. Saturated fatty acids and DHA likely have opposing effects on mitochondrial phospholipid fatty acyl side chain composition and mitochondrial membrane function, though a direct comparison has not been previously reported. We fed healthy adult rats a standard low‐fat diet (11% of energy intake from fat), a low‐fat diet supplemented with DHA (2.3% of energy intake) or a high‐fat diet comprised of long chain saturated fatty acids (45% fat) for 6 weeks. There were no differences among the three diets in cardiac mass or function, mitochondrial respiration, or Ca 2+ ‐induced mitochondrial permeability transition. On the other hand, there were dramatic differences in mitochondrial phospholipid fatty acyl side chains. Dietary supplementation with DHA increased DHA from 7% to ~25% of total phospholipid fatty acids in mitochondrial membranes, and caused a proportional depletion of arachidonic acid (20:4n6). The saturated fat diet increased saturated fat and DHA in mitochondria and decreased linoleate (18:2n6), which corresponded to a decrease in Ca 2+ uptake by isolated mitochondria compared to the other diet groups. In conclusion, despite dramatic changes in mitochondrial phospholipid fatty acyl side chain composition by both the DHA and high saturated fat diets, there were no effects on mitochondrial respiration, permeability transition, or cardiac function.

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