The Absorbability by Rats of Various Triglycerides of Stearic and Oleic Acid and the Effect of Dietary Calcium and Magnesium
- 1 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 109 (10) , 1682-1687
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/109.10.1682
Abstract
Rats were fed diets in which the triglycerides contained oleate and stearate as the sole fatty acids. These fatty acids were esterified to specific positions on the glycerol molecule. The triglycerides were 1-stearoyl diolein (SOO), 2-stearoyl diolein (OSO), 2-oleoyl distearin (SOS), 1-oleoyl distearin (OSS), and triolein (OOO). The absorbability of the fatty acid component was measured by the fat balance technique. Two diets, one sufficient and the other deficient in calcium and magnesium, were used. The oleic acid of all of the triglycerides was absorbed almost completely. The following values for the absorbability of the stearate component in the presence and in the absence of the divalent cations were obtained: OSO 98 and 99; SOO 55 and 96; SOS 37 and 70; OSS 59 and 60. These patterns of absorbability are discussed in relation to the pathway of triglyceride digestion. If the stearic acid is esterified at the 2-position of the triglyceride, the resulting 2-monostearin is well absorbed. If it is esterified at the 1- or 3-position, it is released as free stearic acid, and in the presence of calcium and magnesium it is poorly absorbed.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of the Consumption of Glycerides Containing Behenic Acid on the Lipid Content of the Heart of Weanling RatsJournal of Nutrition, 1974
- Absorbability by Rats of Compounds Containing from One to Eight Ester GroupsJournal of Nutrition, 1972
- Triglyceride Configuration and Fat Absorption by the Human InfantJournal of Nutrition, 1969
- The determination of the true digestibilities of interesterified fats in young pigsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1968
- Effect of Positional Distribution on the Absorption of the Fatty Acids of Human Milk and Infant FormulasJournal of Nutrition, 1968
- Detergent Properties of Bile Salts: Correlation with Physiological FunctionAnnual Review of Medicine, 1967
- Factors Affecting the Absorbability of Saturated Fatty Acids in the ChickJournal of Nutrition, 1961
- The Absorbability of Stearic Acid when Fed as a Simple or Mixed TriglycerideJournal of Nutrition, 1959
- Intermediates Formed during the Digestion of Triglycerides One FigureJournal of Nutrition, 1952
- Directed Interesterification in Glycerides. III. The Synthesis of Single-Fatty Acid 1,3-Diglycerides1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1951