Yamamoto N, Okaniwa Y, Mori S, Nomura M, Okuyama H
Department of Biological Chemistry, Nagoya City University, Japan.
J Gerontol. 1991 Jan;46(1):B17-22. doi: 10.1093/geronj/46.1.b17.
This study examined the effect of dietary alpha-linolenate (18:3n-3)/linoleate (18:2n-6) balance on brain lipid compositions and brightness-discrimination learning ability in aged rats. An alpha-linolenate-rich diet with a peroxidizability index (PI) of 142 and a linoleate-rich diet with a PI value of 80 were used. Long-term feeding of these diets induced a significant difference in the n-3/n-6 ratios of highly unsaturated fatty acids in brain, but the PI values and the conjugated diene contents were similar between the two dietary groups. Rats fed the alpha-linolenate-rich diet had a longer mean survival time and an increased learning ability in senescence. These results contradict an autoxidation-related lipid peroxide theory of aging, and indicate that the aging process must also be considered in terms of n-3/n-6 balance of dietary fats.