Spectrum of effects of dietary long-chain fatty acids on rat intestinal glucose and lipid uptake

Abstract
Isocaloric modification in the ratio of dietary polyunsaturated-to-saturated fatty acids influences intestinal uptake of actively and passively transported nutrients. This study was undertaken to determine which dietary fatty acid was responsible for these alterations in absorption. Adult female rats were fed isocaloric semisynthetic diets high in palmitic and stearic acids (SFA), oleic acid (OA), linoleic acid (LA), or linolenic acid (LNA). An in vitro technique was used to measure the uptake of varying concentrations of glucose as well as a series of fatty acids and cholesterol. Jejunal uptake of 40 mM glucose was highest in rats fed SFA and lowest in those fed LA; ileal glucose uptake was similar in OA, LA, and LNA, but was lowest in SFA. Jejunal uptake of medium-chain fatty acids (8:0–12:0) was higher in OA than in other diet groups; ileal uptake of medium-chain fatty acids was unaffected by diet. Jejunal and ileal uptake of 18:2 was higher in LNA than in SFA or OA; the uptake of the other long-chain saturated or unsaturated fatty acids was unchanged by diet. The ileal but not the jejunal uptake of cholesterol was increased in LA as compared with SFA or OA, and reduced in LNA as compared with LA. These transport changes were not explained by differences in the animals' food consumption, body weight gain, intestinal mass, or mucosal surface area. We postulate that these diet-induced transport alterations may be mediated via changes in brush border membrane phospholipid fatty acyl composition. Thus, intestinal transport of nutrients may be varied by isocaloric changes in the dietary content of individual fatty acids.

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