Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8336568 | The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2016 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Tracer studies suggest that phospholipid DHA (PL-DHA) more effectively targets the brain than triglyceride DHA (TAG-DHA), although the mechanism and whether this translates into higher brain DHA concentrations are not clear. Rats were gavaged with [U-3H]PL-DHA and [U-3H]TAG-DHA and blood sampled over 6 h prior to collection of brain regions and other tissues. In another experiment, rats were supplemented for 4 weeks with TAG-DHA (fish oil), PL-DHA (roe PL) or a mixture of both for comparison to a low-omega-3 diet. Brain regions and other tissues were collected, and blood was sampled weekly. DHA accretion rates were estimated using the balance method. [U-3H]PL-DHA rats had higher radioactivity in cerebellum, hippocampus and remainder of brain, with no differences in other tissues despite higher serum lipid radioactivity in [U-3H]TAG-DHA rats. TAG-DHA, PL-DHA or a mixture were equally effective at increasing brain DHA. There were no differences between DHA-supplemented groups in brain region, whole-body, or tissue DHA accretion rates except heart and serum TAG where the PL-DHA/TAG-DHA blend was higher than TAG-DHA. Apparent DHA β-oxidation was not different between DHA-supplemented groups. This indicates that more labeled DHA enters the brain when consumed as PL; however, this may not translate into higher brain DHA concentrations.
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Authors
Alex P. Kitson, Adam H. Metherel, Chuck T. Chen, Anthony F. Domenichiello, Marc-Olivier Trépanier, Alvin Berger, Richard P. Bazinet,