N. Emmison et al., LINOLEIC AND LINOLENIC ACIDS ARE SELECTIVELY SECRETED IN TRIACYLGLYCEROL BY HEPATOCYTES FROM NEONATAL RATS, American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 38(1), 1995, pp. 80-86
To determine whether specific fatty acids are metabolized differently
by neonatal liver, hepatocyte cultures from neonatal (age: 5, 11, and
21 days) and adult rats were incubated with radiolabeled 18:1, 18:2, o
r 18:3. At each age, the rate of oxidation was highest for 18:3 and lo
west for 18:1. Conversely, esterification was highest for 18:1 and low
est for 18:3. Fatty acid esterification was of the order: day 5 > day
11 > adult > day 21. When incubations contained each of two of the abo
ve fatty acids, one radiolabeled and the other not, 18:1 inhibited oxi
dation of radiolabeled 18:2 by up to 45% in neonatal hepatocytes. In a
ddition, added 18:1 increased glycerolipid accumulation from 18:2 and
18:3. Under these conditions, the relative proportion of triacylglycer
ol secreted in the medium, compared with that accumulated in the cells
, was two- to fourfold higher for day 11 and 21 rat; hepatocytes. The
results suggest that a specific mechanism exists in the livers of neon
atal rats to spare n-3 and n-6 fatty acids from oxidation and instead
secrete them in triacylglycerol.