Incremental replacement of saturated fats by n 3 fatty acids in high-fat, high-cholesterol diets reduces elevated plasma lipid levels and arterial lipoprotein lipase, macrophages and atherosclerosis in LDLR / mice
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2014Metadata
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Chang, Chuchun L.
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Incremental replacement of saturated fats by n 3 fatty acids in high-fat, high-cholesterol diets reduces elevated plasma lipid levels and arterial lipoprotein lipase, macrophages and atherosclerosis in LDLR / mice
Abstract
Objective: Effects of progressive substitution of dietary n 3 fatty acids (FA) for saturated FA (SAT) on
modulating risk factors for atherosclerosis have not been fully defined. Our previous reports demonstrate
that SAT increased, but n 3 FA decreased, arterial lipoprotein lipase (LpL) levels and arterial LDLcholesterol
deposition early in atherogenesis. We now questioned whether incremental increases in
dietary n 3 FA can counteract SAT-induced pro-atherogenic effects in atherosclerosis-prone LDL-receptor
knockout (LDLR / ) mice and have identified contributing mechanisms.
Methods and results: Mice were fed chow or high-fat diets enriched in SAT, n 3, or a combination of both
SAT and n 3 in ratios of 3:1 (S:n 3 3:1) or 1:1 (S:n 3 1:1). Each diet resulted in the expected changes in
fatty acid composition in blood and aorta for each feeding group. SAT-fed mice became hyperlipidemic.
By contrast, n 3 inclusion decreased plasma lipid levels, especially cholesterol. Arterial LpL and
macrophage levels were increased over 2-fold in SAT-fed mice but these were decreased with incremental
replacement with n 3 FA. n 3 FA partial inclusion markedly decreased expression of proinflammatory
markers (CD68, IL-6, and VCAM-1) in aorta. SAT diets accelerated advanced atherosclerotic
lesion development, whereas all n 3 FA-containing diets markedly slowed atherosclerotic
progression.
Conclusion: Mechanisms whereby dietary n 3 FA may improve adverse cardiovascular effects of high-
SAT, high-fat diets include improving plasma lipid profiles, increasing amounts of n 3 FA in plasma
and the arterial wall. Even low levels of replacement of SAT by n 3 FA effectively reduce arterial lipid
deposition by decreasing aortic LpL, macrophages and pro-inflammatory markers.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant
HL40404 (R.J.D.), T32 DK007647/HL007343 (C.L.C.), and a fellowship
from the International Nutrition Foundation/Ellison Medical
Foundation (C.T.).
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129578
DOI: DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2014.03.022
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Atherosclerosis 234 (2014) 401e409
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