Dietary n-3 Fatty Acids Significantly Suppress Lipogenesis in Bovine Muscle and Adipose Tissue: A Functional Genomics Approach
Changes in fatty acid composition of longissimus muscle and subcutaneous adipose tissue of German Holstein bulls induced by a grass-silage/n-3 fatty acid based intervention diet versus a maize-silage/n-6 fatty acid based control diet were analyzed and related to shifts in lipogenic gene expression,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Lipids 2011-07, Vol.46 (7), p.557-567 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Changes in fatty acid composition of longissimus muscle and subcutaneous adipose tissue of German Holstein bulls induced by a grass-silage/n-3 fatty acid based intervention diet versus a maize-silage/n-6 fatty acid based control diet were analyzed and related to shifts in lipogenic gene expression, protein expression, and enzyme activity patterns. Significantly higher amounts of n-3 fatty acids and by mean factors of 2.2–2.5 decreased n-6/n-3 fatty acid ratios in both tissues were obtained upon n-3 fatty acid intervention. In longissimus muscle, these changes of fatty acid profiles were associated with reduced SREBP1c (
p
= 0.02), ACC (
p
= 0.00), FAS (
p
= 0.10) and SCD (
p
= 0.03) gene expression, Δ6D (
p
= 0.03) and SCD (
p
= 0.03) protein expression as well as SCD enzyme activity (
p
= 0.03). In subcutaneous adipose tissue, significantly reduced ACC (
p
= 0.00) and FAS (
p
= 0.01) gene expression, SCD protein expression (
p
= 0.02) and SCD enzyme activity (
p
= 0.03) were detected upon n-3 fatty acid intervention, although lower degrees of correlation between gene and corresponding gene products were obtained in relation to longissimus muscle. The study elucidates tissue-specific functional genomic responses to dietary fatty acid manipulation in regard to fatty acid profile tailoring of animal tissues. |
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ISSN: | 0024-4201 1558-9307 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11745-011-3571-z |