Toxicity of Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Esters for Human Monocyte-Macrophages: The Anomalous Behaviour of Cholesteryl Linolenate
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Free Radical Research
- Vol. 26 (4) , 351-362
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10715769709097815
Abstract
We have investigated the toxicity to human monocytemacrophages, and susceptibility to oxidation, of different individual dietary fatty acids in cholesterol esters and triglycerides, added to the cell cultures as coacervates with bovine serum albumin. Toxicity was assessed using release of radioactivity from cells preloaded with tritiated adenine. Lipid oxidation was measured by gas chromatography (GC). The triglycerides showed a direct relationship between toxicity and increasing unsaturation, which in turn correlated with increasing susceptibility to oxidation. Triolein (18:1; omega-9) and trilinolein (18:2; omega-6) were non-toxic. Trilinolenin (18:3; omega-3) was toxic only after prolonged incubation. Triarachidonin (20:4; omega-6), trieicosapentaenoin (20:5; omega-3) and tridocosahexaenoin (22:6; omega-3) were profoundly and rapidly toxic. There was a similar relationship between toxicity and increasing unsaturation for most of the cholesterol esters, but cholesteryl linolenate was apparently anomalous, being non-toxic in spite of possessing three double bonds and being extensively oxidised. Probucol and DL-alpha-tocopherol conferred protection against the toxicity of cholesteryl arachidonate and triarachidonin. The oxidation in these experiments was largely independent of the presence of cells. GC indicated that formation of 7-oxysterols might contribute to the toxicity of cholesteryl linoleate. The toxicity of triglycerides suggests that polyunsaturated fatty acid peroxidation products are also toxic. Possible mechanisms of cytotoxicity and relevance to atherosclerosis are discussed.Keywords
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