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Dietary α‐linolenic acid increases brain but not heart and liver docosahexaenoic acid levels
Author(s) -
BarcelóCoblijn Gwendolyn,
Collison Lauren W.,
Jolly Christopher A.,
Murphy Eric J.
Publication year - 2005
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/s11745-005-1440-y
Subject(s) - docosahexaenoic acid , fish oil , phospholipid , lipidology , clinical chemistry , food science , biology , biochemistry , linolenic acid , cholesterol , fatty acid , eicosapentaenoic acid , polyunsaturated fatty acid , endocrinology , medicine , fish <actinopterygii> , zoology , linoleic acid , membrane , fishery
Fish oil‐enriched diets increase n−3 FA in tissue phospholipids; however, a similar effect by plant‐derived n−3 FA is poorly defined. To address this question, we determined mass changes in phospholipid FA, individual phospholipid classes, and cholesterol in the liver, heart, and brain of rats fed diets enriched in flax oil (rich in 18∶3n−3), fish oil (rich in 22∶6n−3 and 20∶5n−3), or safflower oil (rich in 18∶2n−6) for 8 wk. In the heart and liver phospholipids, 22∶6n−3 levels increased only in the fish oil group, although rats fed flax oil accumulated 20∶5n−3 and 22∶5n−3. However, in the brain, the flax and fish oil diets increased the phospholipid 22∶6n−3 mass. In all tissues, these diets decreased the 20∶4n−6 mass, although the effect was more marked in the fish oil than in the flax oil group. Although these data do not provide direct evidence for 18∶3n−3 elongation and desaturation by the brain, they demonstrate that 18∶3n−3‐enriched diets reduced tissue 20∶4n−6 levels and increased cellular n−3 levels in a tissuedependent manner. We hypothesize, based on the lack of increased 22∶6n−3 but increased 18∶3n−3 in the liver and heart, that the flax oil diet increased circulating 18∶3n−3, thereby presenting tissue with this EFA for further elongation and desaturation.