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Biosynthesis and bioavailability of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Authors:Juan G Gormaz  Ramón Rodrigo  Luis A Videla  Megan Beems
Institution:1. Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile;2. Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology Program, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile;3. Cellular and Molecular Biology Program, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
Abstract:Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has a high occurrence in most countries. Recent studies estimate its prevalence to be near 30% in United States, Italian and Japanese general adult populations. NAFLD commonly presents along with obesity and insulin resistance (IR), pathologies that share with NAFLD metabolic and inflammatory components. These conditions, particularly NAFLD, are associated with alterations in the bioavailability of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFAs). In the human population, the bioavailability of LCPUFAs depends both on endogenous biosynthesis and diet amount of preformed LCPUFAs. However, the lower liver LCPUFAs product/precursor ratio namely (20:5n?3 + 22:6n?3)/18:3n?3, 20:4n?6/18:2n?6 present in common Western diets, makes critical an adequate pathway activity to ensure minimum bioavailability of LCPUFAs in most Western populations. The key step of this biosynthesis involves Δ5 and Δ6-desaturases, whose activities are altered in NAFLD. During the disease, the presence of molecular activators of these two enzymes does not correlate with the scarce LCPUFAS biosynthesis observed. The key to this apparent contradiction, or at least part of it, could be explained on the basis of the possible sensitivity of the desaturases to oxidative stress; a metabolic condition strongly linked to inflammatory pathologies such as NAFLD, obesity and IR and that, according to latest research, not only would be consequence but also possibly a cause of these diseases. The present review is focused on the relationship between NAFLD and the bioavailability of LCPUFAs, with special reference to the role that oxidative stress could play in the modulation of the liver fatty acid desaturase activity.
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