Abstract

Rats were fed diets devoid of ( n − 3) fatty acids (olive oil supplementation) or high in ( n − 3) fatty acids (fish oil supplementation) for a period of 10 days. In spleen lymphocytes and liver microsomes derived from animals fed fish oil diets, relatively high levels of ( n − 3) eicosapentaenoic (20:5), docosapentaenoic (22:5) and docosahexaenoic acids (22:6) were obtained compared to minimal levels when fed the olive oil diet. When the average lipid motional properties were examined by measuring the fluorescence anisotropy of diphenylhexatriene, no significant different was found between intact liver microsomes from animals fed the two diets. However, when lipid motion was examined in vesicles of phosphatidylcholine, isolated from the microsomes from fish oil fed animals (21.4% ( n − 3) fatty acids), the fluorescence anisotropy was significantly less than the corresponding phosphatidylcholine from olive oil fed animals (5.6% ( n − 3) fatty acids), indicating a more disordered or fluid bilayer in the presence of higher levels of ( n − 3) fatty acids. Phosphatidylethanolamine ( n − 3) fatty acids were also elevated after fish oil supplementation (41.3% of total fatty acids), compared to the level after olive oil supplementation (21.4%). The major effect of the fish oil supplementation was a replacement of ( n − 6) arachidonic acid by the ( n − 3) fatty acids and when this was ‘modeled’, using liposomes of synthetic lipids, 1- palmitoyl-2- arachidonyl(n − 6) or docosahexaenoyl(n − 3)- phosphatidylcholine , significant differences in lipid motional properties were found, with the docosahexaenoate conferring a more disordered or fluid lipid environment. Thus it appears that although lipid order/fluidity can be significantly decreased by increases in the highly unsaturated ( n − 3) fatty acid levels, alterations in membrane domain organization and/or phospholipid molecular species composition effectively compensated for the changes, at least as far as average lipid motional properties in the intact membranes was concerned.

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