Abstract

Tissue and plasma samples were obtained from fetuses removed 1--20 min after injection of 14C-palmitate into the doe at day 21 or day 28 of gestation. Specific activity of maternal plasma free fatty acids (FFA) was higher, but that of fetal plasma FFA lower in 21- than 28-day-pregnant rabbits. In 21-day fetuses, total radioactivity in the liver never exceeded that in the placenta; in 28-day fetuses, the liver radioactivity exceeded that in the placenta after 3 min. Total radioactivity in the fetal brown adipose tissue (BAT) never exceeded that in the placental. Most of the placental radioactivity was initially in the FFA, but at later time intervals the majority of the label was in the phospholipids. The fetal liver and BAT rapidly esterified label into triglycerides. It is concluded that transport of FFA across the placenta is greater at 28 days than at 21 days gestation. The evidence suggests that a pool of placental FFA, which equilibrates rapidly with the maternal plasma FFA, is a possible source of fetal plasma FFA. The rapidity and quantity of label appearing in the fetal liver suggest that fatty acids may first be processed by the liver before transport to extrahepatic tissues.

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