Abstract
Dietary marine lipids markedly reduce the severity of glomerulonephritis and its associated mortality in inbred strains of mice developing autoimmune disease, a model for human systemic lupus erythematosus. We report here the influence of varying the dose of menhaden oil and the timing of its administration on the mortality of female (NZB x NZW) F 1 mice. After ingesting 25 wt% menhaden oil (MO) for periods of 1.5 weeks to 12 months, there was a stable content of tissue n-3 fatty acids, with total n-3 fatty acids of 28% and 35% in spleen and liver, respectively. The extent of protection from mortality was dependent on the dose of MO with marked protection at doses of 11 to 25%, marginal protection at 5.5% and no protection at 2.5% MO. Delay in the institution of MO until ages 5 or 7 months still resulted in large reductions of mortality. Conversely, institution of a MO diet from 6 weeks until ages 5 to 7 months followed by a change to beef tallow resulted in little protection. Serum levels of 4 cyclooxygenase products were reduced ranging from 26 to 76% in mice fed MO diets, compared to mice fed beef tallow, based on radioimmunoassay. The degree of reduction of mortality on different doses of MO was correlated best with tissue levels of C22:5, and levels of C20:5 and C22:6 were similar at high and low doses of MO, suggesting that levels of 22:5 may be related to the protective effects of marine lipids on autoimmune disease.
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