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. 1991 Jun;56(6):1921-31.
doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1991.tb03449.x.

Neural 22-carbon fatty acids in the weanling rat respond rapidly and specifically to a range of dietary linoleic to alpha-linolenic fatty acid ratios

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Neural 22-carbon fatty acids in the weanling rat respond rapidly and specifically to a range of dietary linoleic to alpha-linolenic fatty acid ratios

J R Dyer et al. J Neurochem. 1991 Jun.

Abstract

Changing the dietary ratio of the essential fatty acids (EFA), 18:2n6 and 18:3n3, while keeping the amounts of other fatty acids in the diet constant can rapidly and specifically alter the proportions of n6 and n3 22-carbon fatty acids in the brain of the weanling rat. A dietary 18:2n6/18:3n3 ratio of 165 versus 1.8 caused higher n6 and lower n3 22-carbon fatty acid levels, without changing total 22-carbon fatty acid levels, in phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine from several neural membrane fractions. This was apparent after only 2 weeks and showed no sign of plateauing after 12 weeks. Other neural fatty acids were essentially unaffected. The three most abundant 22-carbon fatty acids responded somewhat differently to increments in the dietary 18:2n6/18:3n3 ratio (1.8, 9, 36, and 165). Levels of 22:4n6 increased by similar absolute amounts for each four-fold increase in dietary 18:2n6/18:3n3 ratio; in contrast, the largest absolute changes in 22:5n6 and 22:6n3 levels occurred as the 18:2n6/18:3n3 ratio increased from 36 to 165. This study shows that the 18:2n6/18:3n3 ratio of diets high in fat (40% of energy) and adequate in EFA, both typical of diets in developed countries, can substantially and relatively quickly affect the 22-carbon fatty acids in the brain, even after the rapid accumulation of these fatty acids during neural growth has ceased.

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