Dietary cholesterol modulates delta6 and delta9 desaturase mRNAs and enzymatic activity in rats fed a low-eFA diet.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to examine the effects of dietary cholesterol on fatty acid desaturases in animals fed a low-EFA diet and its implications for polyunsaturated fatty acid synthesis.
Results Summary
The study found that adding cholesterol to a low-EFA diet increased liver stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 activity and oleic/palmitoleic acid levels but decreased delta6 and delta5 desaturase activity, reducing arachidonic acid and DHA synthesis. This suggests dietary cholesterol may exacerbate EFA deficiency by impairing polyunsaturated fatty acid production.
Population
Animals (specific species not mentioned)
Effective Dosage
1% cholesterol addition to diet
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1% addition of cholesterol to a diet low in EFA | increase | esterified cholesterol content in microsomes and total liver lipids | - | from the first day | markedly increased | #1 |
1% addition of cholesterol to a diet low in EFA | no change | proportion of free cholesterol | - | throughout the treatment | remained unaltered | #2 |
addition of cholesterol | increase | relative proportions of cholesterol palmitoleate and oleate | - | - | increased | #3 |
addition of cholesterol to a low-EFA diet | increase | liver stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 mRNA and enzyme activity | - | - | induced a marked increase | #4 |
cholesterol-rich diet | decrease | liver A6 and delta5 desaturase activity | - | - | depressed | #5 |
1% addition of cholesterol to a diet low in EFA | no change | abundance of delta6 desaturase mRNA | - | throughout the treatment | was not modified | #6 |
cholesterol-rich diet | decrease | percentages of arachidonic acid and DHA in total and microsomal liver lipids | - | - | decrease | #7 |
dietary cholesterol | decrease | highly polyunsaturated acids derived from linoleic and alpha-linolenic acids | an animal or human fed low-EFA diet | - | decreased synthesis | #8 |
The effects of a 1% addition of cholesterol to a diet low in EFA on FA desaturases were examined. The administration of cholesterol markedly increased the esterified cholesterol content in microsomes and total liver lipids from the first day, whereas the proportion of free cholesterol remained unaltered throughout the treatment. An excellent homeostasis in the free cholesterol content was apparently evoked by the acyl-CoA cholesterol acyltransferase. The cholesterol esters were mainly oleate, palmitate, and stearate, and the addition of cholesterol increased the relative proportions of cholesterol palmitoleate and oleate. The addition of cholesterol to a low-EFA diet induced, as in animals fed a high-EFA diet, a marked increase in liver stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 mRNA and enzyme activity. This increased activity apparently evoked a similar enhancement of palmitoleic and oleic acids in total and microsomal liver lipids. The cholesterol-rich diet depressed the liver A6 and delta5 desaturase activity. However, the abundance of delta6 desaturase mRNA was not modified throughout the treatment. This indicates that the depressive effect is evoked at a step beyond that controlled by the mRNA level. The depression of both enzymatic activities was consistent with the decrease in the percentages of arachidonic acid and DHA in total and microsomal liver lipids. Taken together, these results indicate that through its modulating effect on the desaturases, dietary cholesterol may lead an animal or human fed low-EFA diet to a true deficiency by the decreased synthesis of the highly polyunsaturated acids derived from linoleic and alpha-linolenic acids.