Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5512975 | The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2017 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
Maternal docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3) supplies the developing fetus during pregnancy; however, the mechanisms are unclear. We utilized pregnant rats to determine rates of DHA accretion, tissue unesterified DHA uptake and whole-body DHA synthesis-secretion. Female rats maintained on a DHA-free, 2% α-linolenic acid diet were either:1) sacrificed at 56 days for baseline measures, 2) mated and sacrificed at 14-18 days of pregnancy or 3) or sacrificed at 14-18 days as age-matched virgin controls. Maternal brain, adipose, liver and whole body fatty acid concentrations was determined for balance analysis, and kinetic modeling was used to determine brain and liver plasma unesterified DHA uptake and whole-body DHA synthesis-secretion rates. Total liver DHA was significantly higher in pregnant (95±5 μmol) versus non-pregnant (49±5) rats with no differences in whole-body DHA synthesis-secretion rates. However, liver uptake of plasma unesterified DHA was 3.8-fold higher in pregnant animals compared to non-pregnant controls, and periuterine adipose DHA was lower in pregnant (0.89±0.09 μmol/g) versus non-pregnant (1.26±0.06) rats. In conclusion, higher liver DHA accretion during pregnancy appears to be driven by higher unesterified DHA uptake, potentially via DHA mobilization from periuterine adipose for delivery to the fetus during the brain growth spurt.
Keywords
ALAvery long-chain acyl-CoA synthetaseDPAn-3SmaxFATPPFBTLELNAGC-FIDEPAt1/2α-linolenic acidEicosapentaenoic aciddocosahexaenoic acidLinoleic acidOmega-3 fatty acidsPolyunsaturated fatty acidPUFAPregnancyGas chromatography-flame ionization detectionDHAKineticsUptake coefficientMetabolismFatty acid methyl esterFAME یا fatty acid methyl esters Turnover rateFatty acid transport proteinLipidsLivertotal lipid extract
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Authors
Adam H. Metherel, Alex P. Kitson, Anthony F. Domenichiello, R.J. Scott Lacombe, Kathryn E. Hopperton, Marc-Olivier Trépanier, Shoug M. Alashmali, Lin Lin, Richard P. Bazinet,