Abstract

Second-generation rats depleted in long-chain polyunsaturated omega3 fatty acids were recently proposed as a novel animal model for the metabolic syndrome. In the present study, a dietary deprivation of omega3 acids for 3-7 months was found sufficient to provoke in 6-week-old normal rats the same alteration of the fatty acid content and profile of liver phospholipids and triglycerides as that otherwise prevailing in the second-generation omega3-depleted rats, with emphasis on a severe decrease in their omega3 fatty acid content, alterations in the relative contribution of and ratio between selected long-chain polyunsaturated omega6 fatty acids, saturated and monodesaturated fatty acids and precursors of nervonic acid, and liver steatosis. When the omega3-depleted rats were exposed, after the first 7 months of the present experiments and for 2-4 weeks to a diet supplemented with 5% (w/w) flaxseed oil, most of these hepatic variables returned towards or beyond control values. In both the omega3-depleted rats and control animals, however, the eventual exposure to the flaxseed oil-enriched diet failed to suppress liver steatosis and, on the contrary, provoked a further increase in liver triglyceride content. It is proposed, therefore, that the present approach represents a simple and realistic animal model to study the consequences of omega3-depletion. Moreover, the results suggest that to oppose such consequences, e.g. liver steatosis, it may be necessary to combine the dietary supply of omega3 acids with a suitable control of food intake, in both qualitative and quantitative terms.

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