Abstract
Fish are rich in n-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFA), such as eicosapentaenoic (EPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids, thus they have a great nutritional value for human health. In this study, the adipogenic potential of fatty acids commonly found in fish oil (EPA and DHA) and vegetable oils (linoleic (LA) and alpha-linolenic (ALA) acids), was evaluated in bone-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from gilthead sea bream. At a morphological level, cells adopted a round shape upon all treatments, losing their fibroblastic form and increasing lipid accumulation, especially in the presence of the n-6 PUFA, LA. The mRNA levels of the key transcription factor of osteogenesis, runx2 significantly diminished and those of relevant osteogenic genes remained stable after incubation with all fatty acids, suggesting that the osteogenic process might be compromised. On the other hand, transcript levels of the main adipogenesis-inducer factor, pparg increased in response to EPA. Nevertheless, the specific PPARγ antagonist T0070907 appeared to suppress the effects being caused by EPA over adipogenesis. Moreover, LA, ALA and their combinations, significantly up-regulated the fatty acid transporter and binding protein, fatp1 and fabp11, supporting the elevated lipid content found in the cells treated with those fatty acids. Overall, this study has demonstrated that fatty acids favor lipid storage in gilthead sea bream bone-derived MSCs inducing their fate into the adipogenic versus the osteogenic lineage. This process seems to be promoted via different pathways depending on the fatty acid source, being vegetable oils-derived fatty acids more prone to induce unhealthier metabolic phenotypes.
Highlights
In the last decades, both the world population and the consumption of fish and seafood per capita have increased and will continue to rise
The images obtained after Oil red O (ORO) staining of the cells upon all treatments (EPA and LA shown in Fig 1B as a representation) confirmed this observation, being the 200 μM concentration the one causing higher lipid accumulation and the one selected for the following experiments
This study has focused on the characterization of the likely differential effects of fatty acids typical from fish oil (EPA and DHA) and those most commonly found in vegetable oils (LA and ALA) on cellular plasticity and metabolism
Summary
The aim of the present work was to study the effects of the fatty acids EPA and DHA, present mainly in fish oil, and those of LA and ALA, common in vegetable oils, on fat deposition and the expression of both adipogenic- and osteogenic-related genes, in MSCs derived from gilthead sea bream vertebrae
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