𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Effect of dietary fat on lymphocyte proliferation and metabolism

✍ Scribed by Rosemari Otton; Fabiana Graziola; José A. A. De Souza; Tânia C. P. Curi; Mário H. Hirata; Rui Curi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
139 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0263-6484

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The eect of diets enriched with fat containing dierent fatty acids on glucose and glutamine metabolism of mesenteric lymph nodes lymphocytes, spleen, and thymus and lymphocyte proliferation was examined. The following fat-rich diets were tested: (1) standard chow (CC); (2) medium chain saturated fatty acids (MS) Ð coconut fat oil; (3) long chain saturated fatty acids (LS) Ð cocoa butter; (4) monounsaturated fatty acids (MU) Ð canola oil (n-9); (5) polyunsaturated fatty acids (PU) Ð soybean oil (n-6). Of the fat-rich diets tested, MS was the one to present the least pronounced eect. Lymphocyte proliferation was reduced by LS (64 per cent), MU (55 per cent), and PU (60 per cent). Hexokinase activity was enhanced in lymph node lymphocytes by PU (67 per cent), in the spleen by MS (42 per cent), and in the thymus by PU (30 per cent). This enzyme activity was reduced in the spleen (33 per cent) by LS and MU (35 per cent). In the thymus, this enzyme activity was reduced by LS (26 per cent) and MU (13 per cent). Maximal phosphate-dependent glutaminase activity was raised in lymphocytes by MS (70 per cent) and MU (20 per cent). This enzyme activity, however, was decreased in lymphocytes by PU (26 per cent), in the spleen by LS (15 per cent), and in the thymus by MU (44 per cent). Citrate synthase activity was increased in lymphocytes by MU (35 per cent), in the spleen by LS (56 per cent) and MU (68 per cent), and in the thymus by LS (42 per cent). This enzyme activity was decreased in lymphocytes by PU (24 per cent) only. [U-14 C]-Glucose decarboxylation was raised by all fat-rich diets; MS (88 per cent), LS (39 per cent), MU (33 per cent), and PU (50 per cent), whereas [U-14 C]-glutamine decarboxylation was increased by LS (53 per cent) and MU (55 per cent) and decreased by MS (17 per cent). The results presented indicate that the reduction in lymphocyte proliferation due to LS, LU and PU could well be a consequence of changes in glucose and glutamine metabolism.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Effect of adrenaline on lymphocyte metab
✍ L. F. B. P. Costa Rosa 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 163 KB 👁 1 views

This study examined the eect of adrenaline on lymphocyte metabolism and function. The following parameters were addressed: cell proliferation, glucose and glutamine metabolism as indicated by the measurement of enzyme activities, the utilization of metabolites and production and oxidation of substra

Effects of dietary quebracho tannin on n
✍ Dawson, Janet M; Buttery, Peter J; Jenkins, David; Wood, Christopher D; Gill, Ma 📂 Article 📅 1999 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 110 KB 👁 1 views

The effect of feeding quebracho tannin, a mixture of condensed tannins, on dietary nutrient utilisation and nitrogen (N) retention and its effects on the gastrointestinal (GI) tract was investigated in sheep and rats. Sheep (n = 24) were fed on a pelleted diet of dried grass alone (controls) or cont