Comparative bioavailability of dietary alpha-linolenic and docosahexaenoic acids in the growing rat.
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Animal and human studies have indicated that developing mammals fed only alpha-linolenic acid (18:3n-3) have lower docosahexaenoic acid (22:6n-3) content in brain and tissue phospholipids when compared with mammals fed 18:3n-3 plus 22:6n-3. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that low bioavailability of dietary 18:3n-3 to be converted to 22:6n-3 could partly explain this difference in fatty acid accretion. For that purpose, we determined the partitioning of dietary 18:3n-3 and 22:6n-3 between total n-3 fatty acid body accumulation, excretion, and disappearance (difference between the intake and the sum of total n-3 fatty acids accumulated and excreted). This was assessed using the quantitative method of whole-body fatty acid balance in growing rats fed the same amount of a 5% fat diet supplying either 18:3n-3 or 22:6n-3 at a level of 0.45% of dietary energy (i.e., 200 mg/100 g diet). We found that 58.9% of the total amount of 18:3n-3 ingested disappeared, 0.4% was excreted in feces, 21.2% accumulated as 18:3n-3 (50% in total fats and 46% in the carcass-skin compartment), and 17.2% accumulated as long-chain derivatives (14% as 22:6n-3 and 3.2% as 20:5n-3 + 22:5n-3). Similar results were obtained from the docosahexaenoate balance (as % of the total amount ingested): disappearance, 64.5%; excretion, 0.5%; total accumulation, 35% with 30.1% as 22:6n-3. Thus, rats fed docosahexaenoate accumulated a twofold higher amount of 22:6n-3, which was mainly deposited in the carcass-skin compartment (68%). Similar proportions of disappearance of dietary 18:3n-3 and 22:6n-3 lead us to speculate that these two n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids were beta-oxidized in the same amount.