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Teratogenic Actions of Thermally-stressed Culinary Oils in Rats
Authors:Ana Indart  Marta Viana  Martin C Grootveld  Christopher JL Silwood  Isabel Sánchez-Vera  Bartolomé Bonet
Institution:1. Facultad de Ciencias Experimentales y de la Salud, Universidad San Pablo-CEU, Madrid, Spain;2. Department of Diabetes and Metabolic Medicine, Division of General and Developmental Medicine, Barts and the London, Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry, London E1 1BB, UK
Abstract:Lipid oxidation products (LOPs), generated in culinary oils during episodes of thermal stressing can give rise to cellular damage. The aims of this study were to determine whether orally-administered, LOP-containing thermally-stressed safflower oil exerts teratogenic actions in rats, and whether this effect could be prevented by co-administration of &#102 -tocopherol ( &#102 -TOH). Safflower oil was heated for a period of 20 min according to standard frying practices and stored at &#109 20°C under N 2 . Four experimental groups of pregnant Wistar rats were employed; two received 0.30 ml of pre-heated oil (HO), one of which was also supplemented with 150 mg of &#102 -TOH (HOE), and two served as controls, one treated with the non-heated oil (O) and the other without any treatment (C). The oil was administered daily by gavage from day 1 of pregnancy to day 11.5, when the animals were killed and the embryos examined. LOPs and &#102 -TOH were determined both in the heated and non-heated oils. The percentage of embryo malformations and reabsorptions were determined in the above four experimental groups. Heating the oil substantially increased its concentration of LOPs and decreased its &#102 -TOH content. The percentage of embryo malformations in the HO group was 21.73%, compared with 5.6 and 7% in the O and C groups, respectively. Supplementation of the pre-heated oil with &#102 -TOH was found to decrease the percentage of malformations to 7%. The results obtained from these investigations indicate that LOPs detectable at millimolar levels in the heated cooking oils administered (e.g. saturated and &#102, &#103 -unsaturated aldehydes, and/or their conjugated hydroperoxydiene precursors) exert potent teratogenic actions in experimental animals which are at least partially circumventable by co-administration of the chain-breaking antioxidant &#102 -TOH. Plausible mechanisms for these processes and their health relevance to humans regarding diet and methods of frying/cooking are discussed.
Keywords:Oxidative Stress  Congenital Malformations  Neural Tube Defects  Aldehydes  α-Tocopherol
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