Abstract
Male weanling rats were fed vitamin E-deficient and vitamin E-supplemented diets containing 5% corn oil or cod-liver oil for 16 weeks, after which their adipose tissue lipids were extracted and analyzed in a nitrogen atmosphere for carbonyl compounds and fatty acids. The vitamin E-deficient cod-liver oil-fed rats, exhibiting incisor depigmentation and darkened adipose tissue, yielded lipids which had a lower iodine value, contained less polyunsaturated fatty acids, and contained more carbonyl compounds, particularly alkanals and alk-2-enals, than the lipids from the animals fed the vitamin E-supplemented cod-liver oil diet. The tissues of the vitamin E-deficient corn oil-fed rats contained less linoleate and more monocarbonyl compounds than those of the vitamin E-supplemented corn oil-fed animals. The results indicate that vitamin E protection is necessary for the incorporation of C20 and C22 fatty acids into the tissues from the diet and that in the deficiency of vitamin E, a low level of autoxidation occurs in the tissues.