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Effect of subacute toxic levels of dietary cyclopropenoid fatty acids upon membrane function and fatty acid composition in the rat
Author(s) -
Nixon J. E.,
Eisele T. A.,
Wales J. H.,
Sinnhuber R. O.
Publication year - 1974
Publication title -
lipids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1558-9307
pISSN - 0024-4201
DOI - 10.1007/bf02533107
Subject(s) - corn oil , fatty acid , glycerol , food science , chemistry , biochemistry , adipose tissue , biology
The effect of subacute toxicity levels of dietary cyclopropenoid fatty acids upon several physiological parameters was determined in the rat. Diets containing 2% corn oil, 2% Sterculia foetida oil or 2% hydrogenated Sterculia foetida oil were fed. Sterculia foetida oil (50% cyclopropenoid fatty acids) fed rats exhibited retarded growth, elevated organ to body wt ratios, increased saturation of tissue lipid, and abnormal histopathology when compared to corn oil and hydrogenated Sterculia foetida oil fed rats. Growth was retarded 50%, liver/body wt doubled, and the percentage of saturated fatty acids in adipose tissue increased 2.5‐fold for Sterculia foetida oil vs. corn oil comparisons. Three membrane systems were examined in corn oil and Sterculia foetida oil fed rats. Erythrocyte hemolysis rate in 0.3 M glycerol was increased by 30%; induction of mitochondrial swelling by reduced glutathione was inhibited completely and microsomal codeine demethylase activity was depressed nearly 50% in Sterculia foetida oil fed rats. The ability of cyclopropenoid fatty acids to inhibit fatty acyl desaturase and influence tissue and membrane lipid composition is discussed. Most of the detrimental effects observed in cyclopropenoid fatty acids fed rats may be associated with alteration of normal lipid metabolism and membrane function.