Abstract

The adaptive changes in the fatty acid (FA) composition of plasma phospholipids (PL) in response to alterations in environmental water temperature were investigated in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). The changes observed during thermal adaptation from 22°C in summer to 8°C in winter were reproduced by laboratory cold acclimation (CA) at 6°C of 22°C-summer-acclimated animals. In cold-acclimated and winter-acclimated trout, the increase in the unsaturation of PL fatty acids was mainly due to an enrichment of approximately 7% in the total weight percentage of 22∶6n-3, while a concomitant significant decrease in the levels of 18∶0 and of the monoenoic n-9 FA was observed. A time course study revealed that the changes in PL fatty acids became significant after 10 d of CA and were complete after one month. These changes in the composition of the fatty acyl chains of plasma total PL indicate that the FA composition of plasma lipoprotein PL does not remain constant during thermal adaptation. This would suggest that plasma lipoproteins provide a rapid systemic supply of lipids containing more or less unsaturated FA during thermal adaptation of poikilothermic animals.

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