Literature DB >> 9219729

Influence of lipid diets on the number of metastases and ganglioside content of H59 variant tumors.

J Coulombe1, G Pelletier, P Tremblay, G Mercier, D Oth.   

Abstract

We investigated the influence of the fatty acid composition of the diet on the number of hepatic metastases and the ganglioside profile of the primary tumor and metastases. C57BL/6 female mice were fed different diets containing either no fats (TEK) or 8% of fish oil (POL), linseed oil (LIN), safflower oil (SAF) or beef tallow (BT) and were injected subcutaneously in the dorsum with H59 cells, a variant of the Lewis lung carcinoma (3LLc) that metastasizes preferentially to the liver. The omega3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA)-rich diets (LIN and POL) elicited more metastases than the omega6 PUFA-rich (SAF), fat-free (TEK), or saturated fats (BT) diets. However, dietary fat did not influence the ganglioside composition of either the primary tumors or the metastases, at least in the glucidic part. However, comparison of diets with low (TEK, SAF, and BT) and high (LIN and POL) number of metastases showed that the levels of G3 (which could be a second band of GM2) were greater in metastases of the latter group. This study showed that the H59 hepatic metastases contained more GM2 than the s.c. tumors, irrespective of diet or the number of metastases produced. The small differences in the ganglioside profiles observed in this study could have resulted from the limitations of the HPTLC method. A detailed analysis of the lipid chains, as well as glycolipids other than gangliosides, could give more information on changes resulting from different lipid diets.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9219729     DOI: 10.1023/a:1018402321818

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Exp Metastasis        ISSN: 0262-0898            Impact factor:   5.150


  38 in total

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