LINOLEIC AND LINOLENIC ACIDS ARE SELECTIVELY SECRETED IN TRIACYLGLYCEROL BY HEPATOCYTES FROM NEONATAL RATS

Citation
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
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
ISSN journal
03636119
Volume
38
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
80 - 86
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-6119(1995)38:1<80:LALAAS>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
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.