Dietary pentadecanoic acid supplementation at weaning in essential fatty acid-deficient rats shed light on the new family of odd-chain n-8 PUFAs

•C15:0 is a saturated odd-chain fatty acid (OCFA), mainly found in dairy products.•We investigated the roles of dietary C15:0 in essential fatty-acid deficient rats.•Supplementation of C15:0 at weaning led to a significant increase of growth rate.•Supplementation of C15:0 induced the synthesis of od...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of nutritional biochemistry 2025-03, Vol.137, p.109814, Article 109814
Hauptverfasser: Ciesielski, Vincent, Guerbette, Thomas, Fret, Léa, Succar, Mélodie, Launay, Youenn, Dahirel, Patrice, Legrand, Philippe, Vlach, Manuel, Blat, Sophie, Rioux, Vincent
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•C15:0 is a saturated odd-chain fatty acid (OCFA), mainly found in dairy products.•We investigated the roles of dietary C15:0 in essential fatty-acid deficient rats.•Supplementation of C15:0 at weaning led to a significant increase of growth rate.•Supplementation of C15:0 induced the synthesis of odd-chain n-8 PUFAs.•Dietary C15:0 may partly compensate for induced LA deficiency symptoms. Pentadecanoic acid (C15:0) is a saturated odd-chain fatty acid (OCFA), mainly found in dairy products. Its physiological and nutritional effects are still unknown, yet some recent evidences suggest it might be beneficial to human health. Moreover, pentadecanoic acid has recently been suspected of having essential roles in humans, although the mechanisms are not described. We therefore questioned the potential essentiality of this fatty acid (FA). We investigated in vivo the effect of a C15:0 supplementation on essential fatty acid (EFA) deficient Wistar rats. Female rats were fed an EFA-deficient diet 2 weeks before mating, during pregnancy and lactation. Weaned pups were fed the EFA-deficient diet or were switched to a diet supplemented with C15:0 or linoleic acid (LA) for 11 weeks. A control group was fed with EFA during the whole study. Since linoleic acid deficiency is known to induce growth delay, weights were measured throughout the experiment and FA content in collected tissues were analyzed to evaluate biochemical markers of the deficiency. As expected, EFA-deficient rats showed growth retardation, compared to control rats. Supplementation of C15:0 at weaning increased early growth rate compared to deficient animals, as also did the supplementation of C18:2 n-6. Furthermore, the supplementation of C15:0 in the diet of EFA-deficient animals induced the previously undescribed synthesis of odd-chain PUFAs of the n-8 family (C19:3, C21:3 and C21:4 n-8). These results suggest dietary C15:0 might counteract EFA induced growth retardation, possibly through the synthesis of odd-chain n-8 PUFAs, yet mechanisms are to be deciphered for further validation. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0955-2863
1873-4847
1873-4847
DOI:10.1016/j.jnutbio.2024.109814