Dorfman Suzanne E, Wang Shu, Vega-López Sonia, Jauhiainen Matti, Lichtenstein Alice H
Cardiovascular Nutrition Laboratory, Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston, MA 02111-1524, USA.
J Nutr. 2005 Mar;135(3):492-8. doi: 10.1093/jn/135.3.492.
Dietary fatty acids alter HDL cholesterol concentrations, presumably through mechanisms related to reverse cholesterol transport. The effect of dietary fats (coconut oil, butter, traditional stick margarine, soybean oil, canola oil) differing in fatty acid profile on this antiatherogenic process was assessed with respect to plasma lipids; exogenous and endogenous lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), cholesterol ester transfer protein (CETP), phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) activities; and LCAT, apolipoprotein (apo) A-I and scavenger receptor B class-1 (SR-B1) mRNA abundance. Golden-Syrian hamsters were fed a nonpurified (6.25 g/100 g fat) diet containing an additional 10 g/100 g experimental fat and 0.1 g/100 g cholesterol for 6 wk. Canola and soybean oils significantly lowered serum HDL cholesterol concentrations relative to butter. Canola oil, relative to butter, resulted in higher exogenous LCAT activity, and both soybean and canola oils significantly increased hepatic apo A-I and SR-B1 mRNA abundance. Butter, relative to margarine, coconut and soybean oils, significantly increased serum non-HDL cholesterol concentrations. Endogenous and exogenous LCAT, CETP, and PLTP activities did not differ in hamsters fed margarine or saturated fat diets, despite lower hepatic LCAT, apo A-I, and SR-B1 mRNA abundance, suggesting that changes in available substrate and/or modification to the LCAT protein may have been involved in lipoprotein changes. These results suggest that lower HDL cholesterol concentrations, as a result of canola and soybean oil feeding, may not be detrimental due to increases in components involved in the reverse cholesterol transport process in these hamsters and may retard the progression of atherosclerosis.
膳食脂肪酸可能通过与胆固醇逆向转运相关的机制改变高密度脂蛋白胆固醇(HDL-C)浓度。评估了脂肪酸组成不同的膳食脂肪(椰子油、黄油、传统棒状人造黄油、大豆油、菜籽油)对这一抗动脉粥样硬化过程的影响,涉及血浆脂质;外源性和内源性卵磷脂胆固醇酰基转移酶(LCAT)、胆固醇酯转运蛋白(CETP)、磷脂转运蛋白(PLTP)活性;以及LCAT、载脂蛋白(apo)A-I和清道夫受体B1类(SR-B1)mRNA丰度。给金黄叙利亚仓鼠喂食一种非纯化(6.25 g/100 g脂肪)饮食,其中额外添加10 g/100 g实验脂肪和0.1 g/100 g胆固醇,持续6周。与黄油相比,菜籽油和大豆油显著降低了血清HDL-C浓度。与黄油相比,菜籽油导致外源性LCAT活性更高,大豆油和菜籽油均显著增加了肝脏apo A-I和SR-B1 mRNA丰度。与人造黄油、椰子油和大豆油相比,黄油显著增加了血清非HDL-C浓度。尽管肝脏LCAT、apo A-I和SR-B1 mRNA丰度较低,但喂食人造黄油或饱和脂肪饮食的仓鼠的内源性和外源性LCAT、CETP和PLTP活性并无差异,这表明可用底物的变化和/或LCAT蛋白的修饰可能与脂蛋白变化有关。这些结果表明,喂食菜籽油和大豆油导致的HDL-C浓度降低,可能不会对这些仓鼠产生不利影响,因为参与胆固醇逆向转运过程的成分增加了,并且可能会延缓动脉粥样硬化的进展。