Abstract

To elucidate whether dietary lipid peroxides are absorbed in the body, the catabolic fate of trilinoleoylglycerol hydroperoxides (TL-OOH), in the gastrointestines of rats was examined. Oxidized trilinoleoylglycerol with a peroxide value of 1000 meq/kg, 0.5 or 20 mg, was dosed intragastrically to rat together with 59.5 or 40 mg unoxidized trilinoleoylglycerol, respectively. The fate of TL-OOH in gastric and intestinal lumina was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography periodically until 240 min after treatment. At low dose, TL-OOH was soon broken down to linoleic acid hydroperoxides (LA-OOH) and hydroxyls, probably through gastric lipases, whereas at high dose, TL-OOH was retained in the stomach. In both cases, TL-OOH did not reach the intestines, though the unoxidized lipids moved to the intestines. When LA-OOH was given intragastrically, the lipids decomposed in the stomach, and linoleic acid hydroxyls, hexanal, 9-oxononanoic acid, and two novel compounds were detected 30 min after treatment. The novel compounds were identified to be epoxyketones, 11-oxo-12,13-epoxy-9- and 11-oxo-9,10-epoxy-12-octadecenoic acids. Thus, dietary TL-OOH was broken down in the stomach releasing LA-OOH which decomposed further, and did not reach the intestines.

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