Abstract

Although several investigations have linked the degree of fatty acid saturation to plasma lipid responses in the postprandial state, further evaluation is necessary. In this study, we compared the effect of saturated (SFA), monounsaturated (MUFA), and polyunsaturated (PUFA) fatty acids on postprandial lipid metabolism using complementary in vivo and in vitro approaches. Fat (10 g) cholesterol (0.5 g) test meals that provided either lard (SFA), olive oil (MUFA), or sunflower oil (PUFA) were ingested by chow-fed New Zealand white rabbits (n = 8). In addition, hepatic uptake of triglyceride-cholesterol-rich lipoproteins (TCRL) isolated from rabbits chronically ingesting SFA, MUFA, or PUFA diets was measured using freshly isolated chow-fed rabbit hepatocytes. Whatever dietary fatty acids ingested, postprandial triglyceridemia and occurrence of radiolabelled dietary lipids in plasma were not markedly different. Conversely, SFA induced higher postprandial cholesterolemia and phospholipemia than MUFA (P < 0.05) whereas PUFA prevented postprandial cholesterol increase. TCRL disappearance from cultured liver cell media was delayed with SFA-rich TCRL and faster with PUFA whereas MUFA-rich TCRL showed an intermediate figure. From these data, we conclude that SFA, MUFA, and PUFA elicited different postprandial plasma and lipoprotein lipid responses. The fatty acid composition of TCRL had a major impact on their subsequent metabolism, especially uptake by cultured hepatocytes. The SFA-induced hypercholesterolemia could be related to an altered hepatic uptake whereas a faster clearance and hepatic uptake could explain the cholesterol-lowering effect of PUFA in rabbits. MUFA, like PUFA, accelerate uptake by hepatocytes but favor cholesterol ester enrichment of TCRL.

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