Abstract

Male rats were fed a semi-purified diet containing oat bran or wheat bran with or without a marine fish oil to investigate the effects of such combinations on lipid metabolism. Oat bran alone and wheat bran plus fish oil gave lower plasma cholesterol concentrations than wheat bran alone while oat bran plus fish oil gave the lowest. Oat bran increased plasma triacylglycerols compared with wheat bran but oat bran plus fish oil gave concentrations similar to those seen with wheat bran plus fish oil. Oat bran gave higher hepatic cholesterol synthesis rates and a higher activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase compared to wheat bran. The addition of fish oil to either bran diet decreased cholesterol synthesis but HMG CoA reductase activity was not reduced. Oat bran increased hepatic acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyl transferase (ACAT) activity and increased the ratio of esterified to unesterified cholesterol in hepatic microsomal membranes compared with wheat bran. Fish oil decreased hepatic LDL receptor activity and increased HDL binding activity when added to the wheat bran diet but these effects were not seen with oat bran. Oat bran also had no effect on hepatic lipoprotein receptor activity compared with wheat bran. These results show that fish oil and oat bran have complementary cholesterol lowering effects in the rat.

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