Abstract
Abstract: Within the first few hours of life in the mouse, marked changes were seen in brain endogenous free fatty acids (FFA). A 21% decrease in the total FFA pool occurred during the 1st h of life, and a constant value was maintained thereafter to 10 h. Polyunsaturated fatty acids displayed a different pattern of change. There was 27% less free ararhidonic acid at birth (0 h) than 1 h later. Similar values were obtained for docosahexaenoic acid at birth and at 10 h, although palmitoleic and oleic acids decreased markedly after 1 h. The polyunsaturated fatty acyl chains of diglycerides (DG) showed a statistically significant increase as a function of time after birth, despite an unchanged total DG pool size. The brains of pups subjected to 40 min of N2‐anoxia immediately after delivery exhibited a decrease in FFA, especially the monoenoic components, but 60 min of anoxia yielded higher FFA levels. Anoxia induced at 10 h increased FFA and arachidonic acid was higher than when anoxia was induced at 0 h. FFA accumulation was further stimulated by raising the environmental temperature during anoxia. When anoxia was induced, DG exhibited a net increase in palmitate, oleate, and palmitoleate at 0 and 10 h. No arachidonoyl‐DG accumulated at 0 h, even after 60 min of anoxia, and stearate was unchanged at 0 and 10 h. The lipid changes observed in the brain during the first hours of life suggest that the enzymatic reactions that promote accumulation of free arachidonic and docosahexaenoic acids and arachidonoyl‐DG in the mature brain are present at low levels at the time of delivery. The sluggish modifications found in our study may be related to the longer resistance of newborns to oxygen deficiency.
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