1. Feeding fried oil changes antioxidant and fatty acid pattern of rat and affects rat liver mitochondrial respiratory chain components
- Author
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Maurizio, Battino, José L, Quiles, Jesús R, Huertas, M Carmen, Ramirez-Tortosa, Modesta, Cassinello, Mariano, Mañas, Magdalena, Lopez-Frias, and José, Mataix
- Subjects
Male ,Hot Temperature ,Fatty Acids ,Mitochondria, Liver ,Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances ,Antioxidants ,Rats ,Electron Transport ,Membrane Lipids ,Dietary Fats, Unsaturated ,Animals ,Cytochromes ,Plant Oils ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Rats, Wistar ,Olive Oil ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Fat frying is a popular food preparation method but several components like antioxidant vitamins could be lost due to oxidation and some others with toxic effects could appear. Because of such large consumption of frying oils, the effect of high temperatures on the oils is of major concern both for product quality and nutrition, taking into account that dietary fat source deeply influences several biochemical parameters, especially of mitochondrial membranes. Virgin olive oil possesses specific features for modulating the damages occurred by endogenous and exogenous oxidative stress being particularly rich in antioxidant molecules. We evaluated the extent of modifications suffered by virgin olive oil following a short-time deep fat frying procedure: vitamin E and phenolic compound as well as total antioxidant capacity (measured by ESR) decreased, while polar compounds increased. The intake of such an altered oil mainly affected the hydroperoxide and TBARS contents of mitochondrial membranes which were enhanced after the dietary treatments. Also, several mitochondrial respiratory chain components (Coenzyme Q, cytochrome b, c + c1, and a + a3) were affected.
- Published
- 2002