Fat absorption in essential fatty acid deficiency: a model experimental approach to studies of the mechanism of fat malabsorption of unknown etiology. 1973

S B Clark, and T E Ekkers, and A Singh, and J A Balint, and P R Holt, and J B Rodgers

Male rats were made deficient in essential fatty acids by feeding them a fat-free diet supplemented with 4% tripalmitin for 8-12 wk from the time of weaning. After feeding 0.5 ml of [(14)C]triolein or [(3)H]oleic acid, 72-hr stool recoveries of radioactivity were significantly greater in deficient rats than in chow-fed controls. Essential fatty acid deficiency did not reduce the absorptive capacities for triolein or for a medium-chain fat, trioctanoin, measured after 3 and 2 hr of maximal-rate duodenal infusion. In everted jejunal slices from essential fatty acid-deficient rats, uptake of micellar [(14)C]oleic acid at 0-1 degrees C was similar to that of controls, but the rate of incorporation of fatty acid into triglyceride after rewarming to 37 degrees C was significantly reduced. The specific activities of the microsomal esterifying enzymes, acyl CoA:monoglyceride acyltransferase and fatty acid CoA ligase in jejunal mucosa were 30% lower in essential fatty acid-deficient rats. However, the total microsomal enzyme activity adjusted to constant weight did not differ significantly in deficient rats compared with controls. After intraduodenal perfusion of triolein, accumulation of lipid in the intestinal wall was increased in the deficient rats. Because over 90% of the absorbed mucosal lipid was present as triglyceride, essential fatty acid deficiency appears to affect the synthesis or release of chylomicron lipid from the intestine. Analysis of regions of intestine showed that this delay in transport was most marked in the midportion of the small intestine.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007413 Intestinal Mucosa Lining of the INTESTINES, consisting of an inner EPITHELIUM, a middle LAMINA PROPRIA, and an outer MUSCULARIS MUCOSAE. In the SMALL INTESTINE, the mucosa is characterized by a series of folds and abundance of absorptive cells (ENTEROCYTES) with MICROVILLI. Intestinal Epithelium,Intestinal Glands,Epithelium, Intestinal,Gland, Intestinal,Glands, Intestinal,Intestinal Gland,Mucosa, Intestinal
D007583 Jejunum The middle portion of the SMALL INTESTINE, between DUODENUM and ILEUM. It represents about 2/5 of the remaining portion of the small intestine below duodenum. Jejunums
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
D008055 Lipids A generic term for fats and lipoids, the alcohol-ether-soluble constituents of protoplasm, which are insoluble in water. They comprise the fats, fatty oils, essential oils, waxes, phospholipids, glycolipids, sulfolipids, aminolipids, chromolipids (lipochromes), and fatty acids. (Grant & Hackh's Chemical Dictionary, 5th ed) Lipid
D008286 Malabsorption Syndromes General term for a group of MALNUTRITION syndromes caused by failure of normal INTESTINAL ABSORPTION of nutrients. Malabsorption Syndrome,Syndrome, Malabsorption,Syndromes, Malabsorption
D008297 Male Males
D009829 Oleic Acids A group of fatty acids that contain 18 carbon atoms and a double bond at the omega 9 carbon. Octadecenoic Acids,Acids, Octadecenoic,Acids, Oleic
D002247 Carbon Isotopes Stable carbon atoms that have the same atomic number as the element carbon but differ in atomic weight. C-13 is a stable carbon isotope. Carbon Isotope,Isotope, Carbon,Isotopes, Carbon
D002849 Chromatography, Gas Fractionation of a vaporized sample as a consequence of partition between a mobile gaseous phase and a stationary phase held in a column. Two types are gas-solid chromatography, where the fixed phase is a solid, and gas-liquid, in which the stationary phase is a nonvolatile liquid supported on an inert solid matrix. Chromatography, Gas-Liquid,Gas Chromatography,Chromatographies, Gas,Chromatographies, Gas-Liquid,Chromatography, Gas Liquid,Gas Chromatographies,Gas-Liquid Chromatographies,Gas-Liquid Chromatography
D002855 Chromatography, Thin Layer Chromatography on thin layers of adsorbents rather than in columns. The adsorbent can be alumina, silica gel, silicates, charcoals, or cellulose. (McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 4th ed) Chromatography, Thin-Layer,Thin Layer Chromatography,Chromatographies, Thin Layer,Chromatographies, Thin-Layer,Thin Layer Chromatographies,Thin-Layer Chromatographies,Thin-Layer Chromatography

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