Effect of diets rich in medium-chain and long-chain triglycerides on lipogenic-enzyme gene expression in liver and adipose tissue of the weaned rat. |
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Authors: | F Foufelle D Perdereau B Gouhot P Ferre J Girard |
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Institution: | Centre de Recherches sur l'Endocrinologie Moléculaire et le Développement, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Meudon-Bellevue, France. |
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Abstract: | The activity and mRNA concentrations of two lipogenic enzymes, fatty-acid synthase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase were measured in the liver and white adipose tissue of rats weaned to a carbohydrate-rich diet containing either long-chain or medium-chain fatty acids, and compared to those of rats weaned on a diet containing less than 1% (total energy) fat (high-carbohydrate diet). In the liver, the diet containing long-chain fatty acids inhibited the increase of both lipogenic-enzyme mRNA concentrations and activities seen at weaning on the high-carbohydrate diet but did not prevent the decrease in phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase mRNA and activity. In contrast, the diet containing medium-chain fatty acids induced a slower but finally similar increase in lipogenic-enzyme mRNA concentrations and activities. In adipose tissue, a similar trend was observed, although the inhibitory effect of the diet containing long-chain fatty acids was considerably less marked than in liver. It is concluded that medium-chain and long-chain fatty acids have not the same inhibitory potency of the gene expression of lipogenic enzymes, and that long-chain fatty acids have a more marked effect in the liver. |
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