Normal-Fat vs. High-Fat Diets and Olive Oil vs. CLA-Rich Dairy Fat: A Comparative Study of Their Effects on Atherosclerosis in Male Golden Syrian Hamsters.
Alaitz BerriozabalgoitiaJuan Carlos Ruiz de GordoaGustavo AmoresGorka Santamarina-GarciaIgor HernándezMailo VirtoPublished in: Metabolites (2023)
The relationship between milk fat intake (because of its high saturated fatty acid content) and the risk of suffering from cardiovascular diseases remains controversial. Thus, Golden Syrian hamsters were fed two types of fat-sheep milk fat that was rich in rumenic ( cis 9, trans 11-18:2) and vaccenic ( trans 11-18:1) acids and olive oil-and two doses (a high- or normal-fat diet) for 14 weeks, and markers of lipid metabolism and atherosclerosis evolution were analyzed. The results revealed that the type and percentage of fat affected most plasma biochemical parameters related to lipid metabolism, while only the expression of five (CD36, SR-B1, ACAT, LDLR, and HMG-CoAR) of the studied lipid-metabolism-related genes was affected by these factors. According to aortic histology, when ingested in excess, both fats caused a similar increase in the thickness of fatty streaks, but the high-milk-fat-based diet caused a more atherogenic plasma profile. The compositions of the fats that were used, the results that were obtained, and the scientific literature indicated that the rumenic acid present in milk fat would regulate the expression of genes involved in ROS generation and, thus, protect against LDL oxidation, causing an effect similar to that of olive oil.
Keyphrases
- fatty acid
- adipose tissue
- cardiovascular disease
- poor prognosis
- systematic review
- dna damage
- physical activity
- weight loss
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- coronary artery
- optical coherence tomography
- coronary artery disease
- nitric oxide
- binding protein
- weight gain
- long non coding rna
- hydrogen peroxide
- pulmonary hypertension