| Literature DB >> 23690505 |
Irina G Stavrovskaya1, Susan S Bird, Vasant R Marur, Matthew J Sniatynski, Sergei V Baranov, Heather K Greenberg, Caryn L Porter, Bruce S Kristal.
Abstract
The interaction of dietary fats and carbohydrates on liver mitochondria were examined in male FBNF1 rats fed 20 different low-fat isocaloric diets. Animal growth rates and mitochondrial respiratory parameters were essentially unaffected, but mass spectrometry-based mitochondrial lipidomics profiling revealed increased levels of cardiolipins (CLs), a family of phospholipids essential for mitochondrial structure and function, in rats fed saturated or trans fat-based diets with a high glycemic index. These mitochondria showed elevated monolysocardiolipins (a CL precursor/product of CL degradation), elevated ratio of trans-phosphocholine (PC) (18:1/18:1) to cis-PC (18:1/18:1) (a marker of thiyl radical stress), and decreased ubiquinone Q9; the latter two of which imply a low-grade mitochondrial redox abnormality. Extended analysis demonstrated: i) dietary fats and, to a lesser extent, carbohydrates induce changes in the relative abundance of specific CL species; ii) fatty acid (FA) incorporation into mature CLs undergoes both positive (>400-fold) and negative (2.5-fold) regulation; and iii) dietary lipid abundance and incorporation of FAs into both the CL pool and specific mature tetra-acyl CLs are inversely related, suggesting previously unobserved compensatory regulation. This study reveals previously unobserved complexity/regulation of the central lipid in mitochondrial metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: glycemic index; lipidomics; mitochondria; monounsaturated fatty acids; polyunsaturated fatty acids; saturated fatty acids; trans fatty acids; ubiquinones
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23690505 PMCID: PMC3770076 DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M036285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Lipid Res ISSN: 0022-2275 Impact factor: 5.922