Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Effect of dietary linoleic acid content on the distribution of triacylglycerol molecular species in rat adipose tissue

14

Citations

28

References

1992

Year

Abstract

The present study examined the effect of varying dietary linoleate intake (0.01, 0.24, 2.4, 24, 80 or 160 g/kg diet) for 24 weeks on the distribution of triacylglycerol (TG) molecular species in rat epididymal adipose tissue. Adipose TG fractions were purified by thin-layer chromatography and separated into different molecular species by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The identification of TG species was based on fatty acid composition, retention time and the theoretical carbon number. When the dietary 18:2n-6 content was equal to or less than 24 g/kg, no significant amounts of n-6 fatty acids (mainly 18:2n-6) were observed in adipose tissue TG despite the fact that the levels of 20:4n-6 in liver phospholipids increased significantly. There were 12 major molecular species in adipose tissue when the dietary 18:2n-6 content was less than 2.4 g/kg. When the dietary 18:2n-6 content reached 24 g/kg, an additional six TG species containing one, two or three molecules of 18:2n-6 were observed. The levels of TG molecules containing two or three 18:2n-6 residues were further increased when the diet contained very large amounts of linoleic acid (160 g/kg). Conversely, those TG species containing only one 18:2n-6 residue became less abundant. It is suggested that the accumulation of these linoleate-rich TG molecular species in adipose tissue, particularly di- and trilinoleoyl containing TG, is the result of an adequate or an excessive intake of linoleic acid.

References

YearCitations

Page 1