The composition and positional distribution of lipids in developing and mature transgenic Brassica napus seeds accumulating up to 7 mol% of caprylate (8:0), 29 mol% caprate (10:0) or 63 mol% of laurate (12:0) were examined. The accumulation of 8:0 and 10:0 resulted from over-expression of the medium-chain-specific thioesterase (Ch FatB2) alone or together with the respective chain-length-specific condensing enzyme (Ch KASIV). Seeds containing high levels of 12:0 were obtained from plants expressing bay thioesterase (BTE) alone or crossed with a line over-expressing the coconut lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase (LPAAT), an enzyme responsible for the increase in acylation of 12:0 at the sn-2 position. In all instances, 10:0 and 12:0 fatty acids were present in substantial amounts in phosphatidylcholine during seed development with a drastic decrease of 80-90% in mature seeds. At all stages of seed development however, 8:0 was barely detectable in this membrane lipid. Altogether, these results indicate that these transgenic seeds exclude and/or remove the medium-chain fatty acids from their membrane and that this mechanism(s) is more effective with the shorter-chain fatty acids. Furthermore, seeds of 8:0- and 10:0-producing lines had only negligible levels of these fatty acids present in the sn-2 position of the triacylglycerols. In contrast, all 12:0-producing seeds had a substantial amount of this fatty acid in the sn-2 position of the triacylglycerols, suggesting that the endogenous LPAAT is able to acylate 12:0 if no other acyl-CoA species are available.