46 results on '"Léger CL"'
Search Results
2. Supplementation with wine phenolic compounds increases the antioxidant capacity of plasma and vitamin E of low-density lipoprotein without changing the lipoprotein Cu2+-oxidizability: Possible explanation by phenolic location
- Author
-
Carbonneau, M-A, Léger, CL, Monnier, L, Bonnet, C, Michel, F, Fouret, G, Dedieu, F, and Descomps, B
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Effects of dietary crude palm oil, fish oil and their association on cholesterol and lipoprotein constants in rats which could be beneficial in humans
- Author
-
M. M Bellal, Léger Cl, A. Youyou, B. Descomps, A. Niyongabo, and A. Ammouche
- Subjects
Male ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Lipoproteins ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Biology ,Palm Oil ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fish Oils ,medicine ,Weaning ,Animals ,Humans ,Plant Oils ,Vitamin E ,Food science ,Rats, Wistar ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Triglyceride ,Cholesterol ,General Medicine ,Fish oil ,Carotenoids ,Dietary Fats ,Rats ,Human nutrition ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Tocotrienol ,Lipoprotein - Abstract
The aim was first to examine the differential effects of crude and refined palm oil (CPO and RPO) on the lipid and lipoprotein constants of plasma in rats and to compare the effect of crude palm oil to that of fish oil. Secondarily, it was to know whether one can take advantage from the association of CPO with FO. Twenty-four-day-old weaning rats were divided into five experimental groups, each receiving a purified diet containing 10% oil as either a single oil or an equal amount of two oils. After a feeding period of 36 days, the main results were as follows. As compared to the rats fed the RPO diet, those fed the CPO diet had lower total cholesterol, LDL-C, VLDL-C and apoB and higher HDL-C/LDL-C and apoA1/apoB ratios. Those fed the FO diet had only lower VLDL-C and triglycerides and higher HDL-C and HDL-C/LDL-C ratio. Whereas FO associated with RPO in the same diet had the same effect as FO alone, FO associated with CPO tends to reinforce the effect of CPO. This is particularly true for the effects on apoB and apoA1 which were found to be synergistically depressed and enhanced, respectively. Given the role played by these biological constants as predictors of CVD in humans, and in spite of the fact that these predictors are not relevant in rats, these results would suggest the potential interest of CPO or the association of CPO with FO in human nutrition.
- Published
- 1999
4. Differential incorporation of fish-oil eicosapentaenoate and docosahexaenoate into lipids of lipoprotein fractions as related to their glyceryl esterification: a short-term (postprandial) and long-term study in healthy humans
- Author
-
Sadou, H, primary, Léger, CL, additional, Descomps, B, additional, Barjon, JN, additional, Monnier, L, additional, and Crastes de Paulet, A, additional
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Study of NH4-Y zeolites dealuminated by (NH4)2SiF6
- Author
-
Léger, CL, primary, Herreros, B, additional, Hepp, MA, additional, Thoret, J, additional, Potvin, C, additional, Man, PP, additional, and Fraissard, J, additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effects of a low dietary linoleic acid level on intestinal morphology and enterocyte brush border membrane lipid composition
- Author
-
Christon, R., primary, Meslin, JC, additional, Thévenoux, J., additional, Linard, A., additional, Léger, CL, additional, and Delpal, S., additional
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Bat parasites (Acari, Anoplura, Cestoda, Diptera, Hemiptera, Nematoda, Siphonaptera, Trematoda) in France (1762–2018): a literature review and contribution to a checklist
- Author
-
Léger Clément
- Subjects
bibliometry ,chiroptera ,host-parasite associations ,parasite biodiversity ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
This paper is a bibliographical survey of records of bat parasites in France (including Corsica) between 1762 and 2018. In total, 237 scientific publications were analysed. They show that bats are infected with a large diversity of endoparasites and ectoparasites. A total of 113 parasite taxa were identified from 27 host species; in addition, six bats were not identified to the species-level. The helminth fauna of bats comprises three species of Cestoda, 15 of Trematoda, and 13 of Nematoda. Acari parasites include 53 species (in addition to 22 invalid species). Finally, insect parasites comprise 13 species of Diptera (bat flies), 12 of Siphonaptera (fleas), 3 of Hemiptera (bugs), and 1 Anoplura species. Bat taxa reported with parasites were Barbastella barbastellus, Eptesicus serotinus, Hypsugo savii, Miniopterus schreibersii, Myotis bechsteinii, M. blythii, M. capaccinii, M. dasycneme, M. daubentonii, M. emarginatus, M. myotis, M. mystacinus, M. nattereri, M. punicus, Nyctalus lasiopterus, N. leisleri, N. noctula, Pipistrellus kuhlii, P. nathusii, P. pipistrellus, Plecotus auritus, P. austriacus, Rhinolophus euryale, R. ferrumequinum, R. hipposideros, R. mehelyi, Tadarida teniotis, Eptesicus sp., Myotis sp., Pipistrellus sp., Plecotus sp., Rhinolophus sp. and the species complex Pipistrellus pipistrellus/kuhlii/nathusii. As regards E. nilssonii, Vespertilio murinus (Particoloured Bat), M. alcathoe, M. escalerai, P. macrobullaris and P. pygmaeus, no records were found. These published field data originated from 72 of the 96 departments in metropolitan France. The most commonly cited were Ardèche, Ariège, Bouches-du-Rhône, Haute-Savoie, Maine-et-Loire, Moselle, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Pyrénées-Orientales, Sarthe, Haute-Corse and Corse-du-Sud.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Anti-oxydants d’origine alimentaire : diversité, modes d’action anti-oxydante, interactions
- Author
-
Léger Claude Louis
- Subjects
antioxidants ,tocopherols ,carotenoids ,ascorbate ,polyphenols ,Oils, fats, and waxes ,TP670-699 - Abstract
Antioxidants of food origin (tocopherols, carotenoids, ascorbate, polyphenols) exert synergistic (tocopherols and ascorbate, carotenoids and ascorbate) or complementary (tocopherols ands carotenoids, ascorbate and polyphenols) antioxidant actions. It is strongly suggest that high (supranutritional) intakes of tocopherols and carotenoids may turn out to be deleterious if it is not balanced by ascorbate and/or polyphenols adequate intakes, or in ascorbate and polyphenols deficiency which particularly takes place in tabagism or in cases of low fruit/vegetable consumption.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Risques et bénéfices pour la santé des acides gras trans apportés par les aliments. Recommandations
- Author
-
Léger Claude-Louis and Razanamahefa Landy
- Subjects
food trans fatty acids ,human ,health ,recommendations ,Oils, fats, and waxes ,TP670-699 - Abstract
The French Food Safety Agency (Agence Française de Sécurité Sanitaire des Aliments, AFSSA) has recently adopted a definite position on risks and benefits of food trans fatty acids (TFA) for human health. After considering available data on origins and biological activities of all types of TFA, including conjugated fatty acids (CLA), it has been proposed a regulatory definition of these fatty acids which is the chemical one : « the trans fatty acids are all unsaturated fatty acids that contain at least one double bond in a trans configuration ». This definition includes the CLA and TFA of animal origin. Daily intakes of TFA (except CLA) in France was found to be 3 g/d in adults, i.e. 1.3 % total energy intake (E %). The male children are the most exposed to high TFA intakes which culminate at 2.5 E % for the 95 th percentile of the 12-14 year-old male children. Consumption of usual foods (not including the consumption of synthetic CLA supplements) leads to a rumenic acid daily intake inferior to 200 mg/d (0.08 E %). The contribution of TFA of animal origin is 60 % in adult (55 % for milk and dairy products) and 55 % (44 %) for male children, showing a higher consumption of TFA of technological origin in the form of bakery products in children than in adults. According to epidemiological data, TFA intakes (except CLA) of 2 E % are associated to a 25 % increased risk of the coronary heard disease. Clinical studies show that the CLA 10t,12c at the dose of 2.6 g/d should be considered potentially proatherogenic. The loss of body fat mass (the anti-obesity effect) with the administration of CLA mixture 9c,11t + 10t,12c (or 10t,12c alone) is obtained at a daily doses ranging from 1.6 to 6.8 g/d (2.6 g/d), but the loss is generally low even in the case of long term administration and adverse effects are observed in particular with 2.6 g/d CLA 10t,12c regarding insuline resistance, insulinemia, C-peptide, glycemia, HDL-C, enzymatic and non enzymatic peroxydations. The main AFSSA’s recommendations (non exhaustive list) are as follows : people should decrease their consumption of bakery products by 30 %, TFA contents of bakery products should not exceed 1 g per 100 g of the commercialized product, TFA contents of every types of margarines bought by the consumer should be lower than 1% of total fatty acids. Because of the prevalence of calcium deficiency particularly in children, declining consumption of dairy products is not recommended, but consumption of (half-)skimmed milk or products elaborated with (half-)skimmed milk should be preferred. Considering the lack of information on the relationship between animal traditional feeding and TFA contents of animal products that people consume, no content upper-limit is proposed for animal (or more specifically dairy) products. AFSSA points out that administration of the synthetic CLA supplement is not justified in humans and animals as well. Information on trans fatty acid in nutrition labeling should be mandatory for contents higher than 0.1 g/100 g in bakery and dairy products, and 0.1% for vegetable oils, margarines and butter. Given the very low levels of CLA in foods usually consumed, the CLA labeling is assumed to be purposeless.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. La vitamine E : état actuel des connaissances, rôle dans la prévention cardio-vasculaire, biodisponibilité
- Author
-
Leger Claude-Louis
- Subjects
vitamin E ,cardiovascular risk ,nutritional intervention ,cellular action ,LDL ,requirement ,bioavailability ,Oils, fats, and waxes ,TP670-699 - Abstract
Les propriétés anti-oxydantes de la vitamine E – qui font l’objet d’une large majorité des travaux effectués actuellement sur cette vitamine – n’ont été reconnues qu’au cours des années 50. La vitamine E avait cependant été découverte quelque trente ans plus tôt. Mais, paradoxe intéressant, son rôle comme micronutriment essentiel n’a été reconnu qu’à la fin des années 60. Cette vitamine jouit d’un certain nombre de particularités. C’est l’anti-oxydant majeur des milieux lipidiques (huiles, membranes biologiques, lipoprotéines). Elle présente différentes formes moléculaires : des vitamères a, b, g et d, chaque vitamère existant sous différentes formes stéréo-isomériques dont une seule, parmi les huit formes possibles, est naturelle : la forme RRR (figure 1). La molécule présente deux parties : un noyau 6-OH-chromane qui possède la fonction anti-oxydante, et une chaîne latérale à 16 atomes de carbone de structure isoprénique, celle-ci définissant deux grandes familles : les tocophérols à chaîne latérale saturée et les tocotriénols avec une chaîne latérale présentant trois doubles liaisons. Cette chaîne latérale détermine la lipophilicité et la stéréochimie de la molécule. C’est la stéréochimie de la molécule qui détermine à son tour la reconnaissance préférentielle de la forme RRR-a-tocophérol par un transporteur hépatique spécifique dont le rôle physiologique est aujourd’hui reconnu. Chacune de ces formes moléculaires (le nombre théorique est de 64) peut être caractérisée par une activité vitaminique E, définie par référence au pouvoir anti-abortif chez la rate gestante. Les tableaux 1 et 2 donnent cette activité en fonction de la molécule considérée. La forme naturelle de l’a-tocophérol, le RRR-a-tocophérol, possède l’activité la plus élevée, alors que la stéréo-isomérie de la molécule n’exerce aucun effet sur ses propriétés anti-oxydantes. Enfin, c’est à partir de la fin des années 70 et du début des années 80 que les propriétés cellulaires régulatrices de la vitamine E vont être révélées. Elles font aujourd’hui l’objet de recherches actives sur les cascades de signalisation affectant différentes fonctions cellulaires. Elles ne semblent pas corrélées aux propriétés anti-oxydantes mais pourraient impliquer des étapes de reconnaissance stéréo-dépendantes.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. L’acide docosahexaénoïque (DHA)
- Author
-
Léger Claude L.
- Subjects
Oils, fats, and waxes ,TP670-699 - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Présentation
- Author
-
Leger Claude-Louis
- Subjects
Oils, fats, and waxes ,TP670-699 - Abstract
Ce qui frappe aujourd’hui, c’est une évolution rapide des connaissances sur les quatre vitamines liposolubles qui font l’objet des revues générales présentées dans ce dossier, et plus particulièrement peut-être sur les vitamines A, D et E. On savait ces vitamines indispensables en raison de leur implication dans les réactions cellulaires, pas uniquement métaboliques d’ailleurs, mais on ne pouvait les soupçonner d’intervenir dans des phénomènes complexes touchant aux régulations cellulaires et à l’expression des gènes avant l’explosion des techniques de biologie moléculaire. Ces trois vitamines ont ainsi, entre autres, la capacité de réguler la prolifération et la différenciation cellulaire selon des mécanismes qui peuvent paraître différents aujourd’hui dans certains cas (pour la vitamine E par exemple), ou souvent proches (cas des vitamine A et D). Les quatre vitamines sont capables en revanche d’intervenir dans la mort cellulaire programmée (apoptose). Dans le cas du tissu osseux, ce sont les vitamines A, D et K qui agissent sur l’accrétion calcique. La vitamine E, quant à elle, pourrait prévenir, au moins théoriquement, l’ostéoporose.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Diagnosis of iron deficiency anemia in children of Northeast Brazil.
- Author
-
Carvalho AG, Lira PI, Barros Mde F, Aléssio ML, Lima Mde C, Carbonneau MA, Berger J, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Anemia, Iron-Deficiency epidemiology, Biomarkers blood, Brazil epidemiology, C-Reactive Protein analysis, Child Day Care Centers, Child, Preschool, Erythrocyte Indices, Female, Ferritins blood, Hemoglobins analysis, Humans, Infant, Male, Prevalence, Receptors, Transferrin blood, Severity of Illness Index, Socioeconomic Factors, Transferrin analysis, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To diagnose iron deficiency anemia in children., Methods: The study was conducted with a sample of 301 children aged six to 30 months attending public daycare centers in the city of Recife, Northeast Brazil, in 2004. The diagnoses of anemia were based on a combination of different hematological and biochemical parameters: hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, ferritin, C-reactive protein, transferrin saturation and transferrin receptor. The chi-square test and ANOVA were used in the statistical analysis., Results: Of all children studied, 92.4% had anemia (Hb<110 g/L) and 28.9% had moderate/severe anemia (Hb<90 g/L). Lower levels of hemoglobin were found in children aged 6-17 months. Iron deficiency was found in 51.5% of children using ferritin (<12 microg/L) as parameter. Taking into consideration the combination of hemoglobin level, ferritin and transferrin receptor, 58.1% had anemia with iron deficiency, 34.2% had anemia without iron deficiency and 2.3% had iron deficiency without anemia. Mean ferritin concentration was significantly higher in children with high C-reactive protein when compared with those with normal levels (22.1 vs. 14.8 microg/L)., Conclusions: The use of several biochemical and hematological parameters allowed to diagnosing iron deficiency anemia in two thirds of children, suggesting a need to identify other determinants of anemia without iron deficiency.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Ellagic acid and its methyl-derivatives inhibit a newly found nitratase activity.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Torres-Rasgado E, Fouret G, Lauret C, and Carbonneau MA
- Subjects
- Beverages, Blood Proteins metabolism, Ellagic Acid chemistry, Fruit chemistry, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Lipoproteins metabolism, Serum Albumin metabolism, Ellagic Acid analogs & derivatives, Ellagic Acid pharmacology, Oxidoreductases antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
We have recently shown that low density lipoprotein (LDL) was able to denitrate albumin-bound 3-NO(2)-Tyr residues and to concomitantly release NO(3)(-) through a Ca(2+)-dependent process that has been ascribed to a specific protein structure. A lipophilic food component (gamma-tocopherol), which is easily loaded into LDL has been found to totally inhibit denitrating activity. We presently found that ellagic acid (EA) and its methylated derivatives, 4,4'O-methyl- and 3,3'O-methyl-ellagic acids (MeEA1 and MeEA2, respectively), amphipathic phenolic components of certain fruits and beverages, were also able to inhibit this activity, with a total inhibition for EA and a 60% inhibition for MeEA1 and MeEA2. EA exhibited the highest affinity for protein plasma, whereas a higher affinity of MeEA1 and MeEA2 (with MeEA1 > MeEA2) than EA was found for lipoprotein fractions, suggesting that the inhibition-driving property is protein affinity. As a result of this nitratase-inhibition property EA and its natural metabolite MeEA2 may have a beneficial role in special physiopathological conditions.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. First evidence for an LDL- and HDL-associated nitratase activity that denitrates albumin-bound nitrotyrosine--physiological consequences.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Torres-Rasgado E, Fouret G, and Carbonneau MA
- Subjects
- Calcium pharmacology, Humans, Peroxynitrous Acid metabolism, Tyrosine metabolism, Lipoproteins, HDL metabolism, Lipoproteins, LDL metabolism, Oxidoreductases metabolism, Serum Albumin metabolism, Tyrosine analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
In the systemic circulation, LDL occurs in the form of a weakly nitrated LDL-albumin complex (LAC). The question here is whether LAC (or HDL) is able to denitrate the albumin-bound 3-NO(2)-tyrosine (3NT). Nitrated albumin was incubated in the presence of lipoprotein fraction (LPF) to be tested, with or without Ca(2+). After precipitation and centrifugation, supernatants (SNs) and protein pellets (PP) were collected. HCl proteolysis was carried out with deuterated 3NT as an internal standard, and amino acids were derivatized for GC-MS analysis, whereas SNs were used for NO(2) (-)/NO(3) (-)-fluorimetric assays. A loss of 3NT, higher with albumin-low LDL than with albumin-rich LDL or HDL, was found in PP only in the presence of Ca(2+). gamma-Tocopherol loading of LPF inhibited 3NT loss. 3NT loss was found for the first time to be stoichiometrically equivalent to NO(3) (-), proving that the 3NT loss must be ascribed to a 3NT-denitrating nitratase activity. 3NT loss and NO(3) (-) production that clearly cannot be attributed to PON-1 were impaired by D-penicillamine and phenylacetate, inhibitor, and substrate of PON-1, respectively, leading to speculate on the active site. Finally, nitratase activity and albumin contribute to beneficially convert peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) into nonbioactive NO(3) (-). But, in inflammatory conditions, xanthine oxidoreductase is expressed leading to detrimentally reduce O(2) and NO(3) (-) into O(2) (*) (-) and NO(*) that may interact, reconstituting the ONOO(-) pool. The real consequence of nitratase activity and the physiological significance of nitration/denitration processes remain to be explored.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Regional Brazilian diet-induced pre-natal malnutrition in rats is correlated with the proliferation of cultured vascular smooth muscle cells.
- Author
-
Paixão AD, Aléssio ML, Martins JP, Léger CL, Monnier L, and Parés-Herbuté N
- Subjects
- Animals, Aorta cytology, Aorta pathology, Brazil, Cells, Cultured, Female, Nutritional Requirements, Nutritional Status, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Renal Artery cytology, Renal Artery pathology, Arteriosclerosis pathology, Cell Division physiology, Malnutrition physiopathology, Muscle, Smooth, Vascular pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: Pre-natal malnutrition induces hypertension and insulin resistance, pathologies commonly linked to atherosclerotic disease. The proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) is important during development of the atherosclerotic plaque. In this work, we investigated whether the serum of pre-natal malnourished Wistar rats could alter the proliferation of aortic and renal artery SMCs in culture. Malnutrition was induced by feeding a basic regional diet available in a rural area of Pernambuco State, Brazil. This diet was rich in carbohydrates and deficient in proteins, lipids, vitamins and minerals, including sodium chloride., Methods and Results: Serum was obtained from the blood of 90-day-old control and pre-natal undernourished rats. SMCs from control Wistar rats at the 6th passage were allowed to adhere to plates in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) supplemented with fetal calf serum (10%). Subsequently, the SMCs were maintained in DMEM supplemented with rat serum (10%). The number of cells was counted on the 3rd, 6th and 8th days of culture into rat serum. [3H]-thymidine incorporation into SMCs was evaluated after 20 h or 6 days of incubation. The birth weight of male and female undernourished offspring was 25% (p<0.05) and 46% (p<0.05) lower, respectively, than their corresponding control groups. On the 8th day of culture, the number of aortic SMCs in the serum of undernourished male and female rats, as well as renal artery SMCs in the serum of undernourished female rats, was higher than in the serum of control rats. The [3H]-thymidine incorporation was higher in aortic SMCs incubated for 6 days in the serum of undernourished male and female rats. At confluence, the density of aortic SMCs was higher than that of renal artery SMCs., Conclusions: Pre-natal malnutrition produces serum with altered properties that can affect the proliferation of SMCs and may contribute to atherosclerotic disease.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Fluorescence spectroscopy for monitoring deterioration of extra virgin olive oil during heating.
- Author
-
Cheikhousman R, Zude M, Bouveresse DJ, Léger CL, Rutledge DN, and Birlouez-Aragon I
- Subjects
- Hot Temperature, Lipid Peroxides analysis, Olive Oil, Phenylethyl Alcohol analogs & derivatives, Phenylethyl Alcohol analysis, Vitamin E analysis, Plant Oils chemistry, Spectrometry, Fluorescence methods
- Abstract
The potential of fluorescence spectroscopy for characterizing the deterioration of extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) during heating was investigated. Two commercial EVOO were analysed by HPLC to determine changes in EVOO vitamin E and polyphenols as a result of heating at 170 degrees C for 3 h. This thermal oxidation of EVOO caused an exponential decrease in hydroxytyrosol and vitamin E (R(2)=0.90 and 0.93, respectively) whereas the tyrosol content was relatively stable. At the same time, amounts of preformed hydroperoxides (ROOH), analysed by an indirect colorimetric method, decreased exponentially during the heating process (R(2)=0.94), as a result of their degradation into secondary peroxidation products. Fluorescence excitation spectra with emission at 330 and 450 nm were recorded to monitor polyphenols and vitamin E evolution and ROOH degradation, respectively. Partial least-squares calibration models were built to predict these indicators of EVOO quality from oil fluorescence spectra. A global approach was then proposed to monitor the heat charge from the overall fluorescence fingerprint. Different data pretreatment methods were tested. This study indicates that fluorescence spectroscopy is a promising, rapid, and cost-effective approach for evaluating the quality of heat-treated EVOO, and is an alternative to time-consuming conventional analyses. In future work, calibration models will be developed using a wide range of EVOO samples.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A thromboxane effect of a hydroxytyrosol-rich olive oil wastewater extract in patients with uncomplicated type I diabetes.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Carbonneau MA, Michel F, Mas E, Monnier L, Cristol JP, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 urine, Dinoprost analogs & derivatives, Dinoprost urine, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Olive Oil, Phenylethyl Alcohol pharmacology, Platelet Aggregation drug effects, Time Factors, Waste Disposal, Fluid methods, Antioxidants pharmacology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 blood, Phenylethyl Alcohol analogs & derivatives, Plant Oils pharmacology, Thromboxane B2 blood, Waste Products
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the antioxidant/non-antioxidant effects of a hydroxytyrosol (HT)-rich phenolic extract from olive mill wastewaters administered with a breakfast., Design, Setting and Subjects: Five type I diabetic patients received 25 mg of HT the first day and 12.5 mg/day the following 3 days. Blood sampling was carried out at T(0) (baseline) and T(4d) just before the breakfast + HT administration and at time points 1, 2, 3 and 4 h after T(0). Urines (24-h) were collected from T(0) to T(4d). Baseline HbA1c was generally inferior to 10%, glycemia was within the range 6-24 mmol/l, whereas total cholesterol, HDL-chol and triglycerides were normal., Results: The major finding was the 46% decrease in the serum TXB(2) production after blood clotting at T(4d). Plasma vitamin A, E, beta-carotene were not changed. Vitamin C tended to increase (P = 0.075). Plasma antioxidant capacity was enhanced at T(0)+1 h only, whereas its main determinants (albumin, bilirubin, uric acid) were not modified. Urinary 8-isoPGF(2alpha) levels were highly variable and were not affected significantly by HT administration., Conclusion: The major effect of HT accounts for an antiaggregating platelet action, leading to a possible prevention of thrombotic and microthrombotic processes.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Potential anti-atherogenic cell action of the naturally occurring 4-O-methyl derivative of gallic acid on Ang II-treated macrophages.
- Author
-
Oliveira MV, Badia E, Carbonneau MA, Grimaldi P, Fouret G, Lauret C, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, CD36 Antigens genetics, Cell Line, DNA Primers, Humans, Macrophages metabolism, Macrophages physiology, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Receptors, Angiotensin genetics, Superoxides metabolism, Angiotensin II pharmacology, Arteriosclerosis prevention & control, Gallic Acid pharmacology, Macrophages drug effects
- Abstract
We have recently established that the blood concentrations of gallic acid (GA), a polyphenolic component naturally found in food, and its O-methyl derivatives are very low (practically < or = 1 microM) in physiological (postprandial) condition. Using acellular oxidant systems and macrophage-differentiated promonocytes (MDPs) THP-1, we show here that the direct and indirect (through depressing effect on the superoxide cell production) antioxidant properties of these components were not effective at these concentrations. In contrast, 4-O-methyl GA was the most efficient component to depress AT1R and CD36 mRNA expression in Ang II-treated MDPs, suggesting a strong inhibition of Ang II-triggered pro-atherogenic mechanisms of foam cell formation.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Red-wine beneficial long-term effect on lipids but not on antioxidant characteristics in plasma in a study comparing three types of wine--description of two O-methylated derivatives of gallic acid in humans.
- Author
-
Cartron E, Fouret G, Carbonneau MA, Lauret C, Michel F, Monnier L, Descomps B, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Adult, Antioxidants pharmacology, Apolipoproteins A blood, Apolipoproteins A drug effects, Apolipoproteins B blood, Apolipoproteins B drug effects, Caffeic Acids blood, Catechin blood, Gallic Acid analogs & derivatives, Humans, Lipid Peroxidation drug effects, Lipid Peroxidation physiology, Lipoproteins, LDL blood, Lipoproteins, LDL drug effects, Male, Time Factors, Gallic Acid blood, Lipid Metabolism, Wine
- Abstract
The purpose of this double clinical study was (1) to evaluate the effect of one single intake (300 ml) of red wine (RW) on the plasma antioxidant capacity (pAOC) and plasma phenolics over the 24-h time period following the intake, and (2) to compare the long-term effects of daily intakes (250 ml/d) of RW, white wine (WW) and Champagne (CH) on the plasma and LDL characteristics of healthy subjects. In the first part, blood samples were collected just before and after wine consumption. In the second part, subjects received the 3 types of wine successively, only at the mealtime, over 3-week periods separated by a 3-week wash out. Blood samples were drawn in fasting condition before and after each 3-week wine consumption period. The peak of pAOC was at 3-4 h following the single intake of RW, that of catechin was at 4 h (0.13 micromol/l) and that of gallic acid and caffeic acid was earlier (< or = 1.5 and 0.3 micromol/l, respectively). In plasma, the major form of gallic acid was 4-O-methylated, but a minor form (the 3-O-methyl derivative) appeared. In the long term study, no wine was able to change LDL oxidizability, but some other parameters were modified specifically: RW decreased pAOC (without changing TBARS and uric acid plasma levels), LDL lipids and total cholesterol (TC), and increased plasma apoA1, whereas CH increased plasma vitamin A. The beneficial effect of RW seems to mainly be explained by its action on lipid and lipoprotein constants, and not by its antioxidant one.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Synergistic antioxidative properties of phenolics from natural origin toward low-density lipoproteins depend on the oxidation system.
- Author
-
Shafiee M, Carbonneau MA, d'Huart JB, Descomps B, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Amidines metabolism, Copper metabolism, Drug Synergism, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Oxidants metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, Antioxidants pharmacology, Lipoproteins, LDL metabolism, Phenols pharmacology, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Tocotrienols pharmacology
- Abstract
Using an approach in line with that of a previous report, we assessed the antioxidant activity of several natural, polyphenol- or tocotrienol-rich mixtures: extracts from Elaesis Guineensis oil (A) and Vitis vinifera (B), a Coffea robusta powder (C), and extracts from Olea europea mill wastewaters (D), Solanum melongena (E), and Lycopersicon esculentum (F). The copper- and 2-2'-azobis(2-amidinopropane) hydrochloride (AAPH)-oxidation systems were used in the presence of low-density lipoprotein. For comparison, antioxidant activities of chlorogenic acid and catechin, as archetypes of molecules highly efficient with the copper- and the AAPH-oxidation system, respectively, were assessed. The aim was to establish the occurrence of synergistic antioxidant actions among some of these natural mixtures. On a molar basis, the highest specific antioxidant activities (SAA) were found for B, chlorogenic acid, and C in the copper system, and for A, catechin, and B in the AAPH system. On a mass basis, the highest SAA were found, respectively, for chlorogenic acid, B, and catechin, and for catechin, chlorogenic acid, and B. These results show that large discrepancies take place in the evaluations between the two systems. B and C exhibited a synergistic antioxidant efficiency, in the presence or absence of A, but only with the copper system. This was also true for the two types of A+B+C mixture that were tested. It is thought that this association might provide an ideal combination, incorporating both the radical scavenger and the transition-metal ion chelation properties of B and C.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Wine phenolic antioxidants inhibit AP-1 transcriptional activity.
- Author
-
Maggi-Capeyron MF, Ceballos P, Cristol JP, Delbosc S, Le Doucen C, Pons M, Léger CL, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Cell Line, DNA Primers, Humans, Luciferases genetics, Luminescent Measurements, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate pharmacology, Transcription Factor AP-1 metabolism, alpha-Tocopherol pharmacology, Antioxidants pharmacology, Hydroxybenzoates pharmacology, Transcription Factor AP-1 antagonists & inhibitors, Wine analysis
- Abstract
Some of the beneficial effects of moderate wine consumption may be related to the antioxidant properties of polyphenolic compounds containing tannins, flavonoids, and phenolic acids. Cellular actions have recently been reported and may involve the modulation of transcriptional factors such as AP-1 (activator protein-1), which controls the expression of various genes implicated in inflammation processes, cell differentiation, and proliferation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the modulation of AP-1 activity by the phenolic acids (gallic, caffeic, protocatechic, paracoumaric, sinapic, and ferulic acids) that are present in wine and to compare their modulating pathways to those of lipophilic or hydrophilic "chain-breaking" antioxidants (such as DL-alpha-tocopherol or trolox) vitamin C, nitric oxide, and reduced glutathione. AP-1 response was studied on a cell line (MTLN) derived from MCF-7 cells transfected with luciferase gene under TRE sequence control. After stimulation by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 100 nM, 6 h, 10(-7) M), luciferase activity was determined by a luminescence method in the presence of luciferine/coenzyme A solution using a luminometer (LKB 1251, Finland). Antioxidants to be tested were incubated with cells in the presence or absence of PMA. Stimulation with PMA resulted in an AP-1-mediated increase in luciferase gene expression corresponding to an 8-fold increase in luciferase activity. After stimulation by PMA, a dose-dependent inhibition of AP-1 was observed with the six phenolic acids in the 20 nM-20 microM concentration range: gallic acid > caffeic > protocatechic, paracoumaric, sinapic acids > ferulic acid. Inhibition was more pronounced with phenolic acids than with DL-alpha-tocopherol (IC(50) = 5 +/- 4.5 microM for gallic acid vs 85 +/- 11 microM for vitamin E). None of the hydrophilic antioxidants inhibited PMA-induced AP-1 activation. None of the antioxidants tested in the absence of PMA stimulation induced any activation or inhibition of AP-1. Our results suggest that phenolic acids may act directly on cell signaling via inhibition of AP-1 transcriptional activity. In addition to preventing LDL oxidation in the arterial wall, our observations indicate that phenolic acids have a cell-mediated capacity to prevent some of the processes involved in atherosclerosis in a plasma concentration range compatible with nutritional intakes.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Specific antioxidant activity of caffeoyl derivatives and other natural phenolic compounds: LDL protection against oxidation and decrease in the proinflammatory lysophosphatidylcholine production.
- Author
-
Cartron E, Carbonneau MA, Fouret G, Descomps B, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Humans, Lipoproteins, LDL blood, Oxidation-Reduction, Antioxidants pharmacology, Caffeic Acids pharmacology, Inflammation Mediators metabolism, Lysophosphatidylcholines biosynthesis, Phenols pharmacology
- Abstract
Specific antioxidant activity (SAA) (i.e., activity related to the molar or gallic acid equivalent amount of antioxidant) of natural polyphenolic mixtures or pure phenolic compounds was studied using their capacity to delay the conjugated diene production brought about by in vitro LDL copper-mediated or AAPH-mediated oxidation. The cinnamic acid series (caffeic, sinapic, ferulic acids) displayed a constant SAA over a large range of concentrations, whereas the benzoic acid series (gallic and protocatechuic acids) showed much higher SAA at low concentrations. The natural phenolic mixtures had a constant SAA. The highest SAA was obtained with caffeoyl esters (caffeoylquinic, rosmarinic, and caffeoyltartaric acids) and catechin for the copper-oxidation and the AAPH-oxidation system, respectively. Phenolic mixtures and acids delayed vitamin E depletion and decreased proinflammatory lysophosphatidylcholine production. As with polyphenols, probucol delayed lysophosphatidylcholine and conjugated dienes production, at higher concentrations, but was not effective at preventing vitamin E depletion. Polyphenols prevent the oxidation of LDL and its constituents (vitamin E, phosphatidylcholine), which is compatible with an antiinflammatory and antiatherosclerotic role in pathophysiological conditions.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Decreased superoxide anion production in cultured human promonocyte cells (THP-1) due to polyphenol mixtures from olive oil processing wastewaters.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Kadiri-Hassani N, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Food Handling, Humans, Monocytes drug effects, Olive Oil, Phenols chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Polyphenols, Flavonoids, Industrial Waste analysis, Monocytes metabolism, Phenols pharmacology, Plant Oils chemistry, Polymers pharmacology, Superoxides metabolism, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine whether human monocytic line THP-1 after differentiation into adherent macrophages, taken as a model of human macrophages implicated in atheroma, is able to produce lower quantities of O(2)(*)(-) either in the presence of polyphenol-rich olive oil wastewater (OWW) fractions or after OWW preincubation and withdrawal from the medium. In these respective conditions, the purpose was to examine the scavenging activity and the cell action of OWW toward O(2)(*)(-) production. It was clearly seen that OWW fractions lowered the O(2)(*)(-) production in both conditions, leading to the conclusion that they were able to scavenge O(2)(*)(-) and to depress O(2)(*)(-) production in the cell. Given the role of O(2)(*)(-) in LDL oxidation and oxidized LDL in atheroma, these results support an antiatherogenic role of OWW and its potential utilization as a food complement.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Risk factors for cortical, nuclear, and posterior subcapsular cataracts: the POLA study. Pathologies Oculaires Liées à l'Age.
- Author
-
Delcourt C, Cristol JP, Tessier F, Léger CL, Michel F, and Papoz L
- Subjects
- Adrenal Cortex Hormones adverse effects, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Asthma epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cataract etiology, Cataract pathology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms epidemiology, Odds Ratio, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Smoking adverse effects, Vitamin A blood, Cataract epidemiology, Lens Cortex, Crystalline pathology, Lens Nucleus, Crystalline pathology
- Abstract
The POLA (Pathologies Oculaires Liées à L'Age) Study is a population-based study of cataract and age-related macular degeneration and their risk factors being carried out among 2,584 residents of Sète, southern France, aged 60-95 years. Recruitment took place between June 1995 and July 1997. Cataract classification was based on a standardized lens examination by slit lamp, according to Lens Opacities Classification System III. This paper presents results obtained from cross-sectional analysis of the first phase of the study. In polytomous logistic regression analyses, an increased risk of cataract was found for female sex (cataract surgery: odds ratio (OR) = 3.03; cortical cataract: OR = 1.67), brown irises (cortical, nuclear, and mixed cataracts: OR = 1.61), smoking (cataract surgery: OR = 2.34 for current smokers and OR = 3.75 for former smokers), known diabetes of 10 or more years' duration (posterior subcapsular, cortical, and mixed cataracts and cataract surgery: OR = 2.72), use of oral corticosteroids for at least 5 years (posterior subcapsular cataract: OR = 3.25), asthma or chronic bronchitis (cataract surgery: OR = 2.04), cancer (posterior subcapsular cataract: OR = 1.92), and cardiovascular disease (cortical cataract: OR = 1.96). Decreased risk of cataract was found with higher education (all types of cataract and cataract surgery: OR = 0.59), hypertension (cataract surgery: OR = 0.57), and high plasma retinol levels (nuclear and mixed cataracts and cataract surgery: OR = 0.75 for a 1-standard-deviation increase). Most of the risk factors identified in this study confirm the findings of other studies. The association of cataract with plasma retinol level requires further investigation.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Age-related macular degeneration and antioxidant status in the POLA study. POLA Study Group. Pathologies Oculaires Liées à l'Age.
- Author
-
Delcourt C, Cristol JP, Tessier F, Léger CL, Descomps B, and Papoz L
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antioxidants metabolism, Ascorbic Acid blood, Cataract blood, Cataract epidemiology, Cataract etiology, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Macular Degeneration etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Nutritional Status, Prevalence, Vitamin A blood, Macular Degeneration blood, Macular Degeneration epidemiology, Vitamin E blood
- Abstract
Objective: To give the levels of antioxidant nutrients in relation to age-related macular degeneration (AMD)., Methods: Pathologies Oculaires Liees a l'Age is a population-based study on cataract and AMD and their risk factors, carried out on 2584 inhabitants of Sete, France. Age-related macular degeneration was defined by findings from fundus photographs according to an international classification. Biological measurements were taken from fasting blood samples., Results: After multivariate adjustment, plasma alpha-to-copherol levels showed a weak negative association with late AMD (P = .07). Lipid-standardized plasma alpha-tocopherol levels showed a significant negative association with late AMD (P= .003): the risk of late AMD was reduced by 82% in the highest quintile compared with the lowest. Similarly, lipid-standardized plasma alpha-tocopherol levels were inversely associated with early signs of AMD (odds ratio, 0.72 [95% confidence interval, 0.53-0.98]; P=.04). No associations were found with plasma retinol and ascorbic acid levels or with red blood cell glutathione values., Comment: These results suggest that vitamin E may provide protection against AMD. Only randomized interventional studies could prove the protective effect of vitamin E on AMD.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Effects of dietary crude palm oil, fish oil and their association on cholesterol and lipoprotein constants in rats which could be beneficial in humans.
- Author
-
Niyongabo A, Youyou A, Léger CL, Descomps B, Ammouche A, and Bellal M
- Subjects
- Animals, Carotenoids pharmacology, Humans, Male, Palm Oil, Plant Oils chemistry, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Vitamin E analogs & derivatives, Vitamin E pharmacology, Cholesterol blood, Dietary Fats pharmacology, Fish Oils pharmacology, Lipoproteins blood, Plant Oils pharmacology
- Abstract
The aim was first to examine the differential effects of crude and refined palm oil (CPO and RPO) on the lipid and lipoprotein constants of plasma in rats and to compare the effect of crude palm oil to that of fish oil. Secondarily, it was to know whether one can take advantage from the association of CPO with FO. Twenty-four-day-old weaning rats were divided into five experimental groups, each receiving a purified diet containing 10% oil as either a single oil or an equal amount of two oils. After a feeding period of 36 days, the main results were as follows. As compared to the rats fed the RPO diet, those fed the CPO diet had lower total cholesterol, LDL-C, VLDL-C and apoB and higher HDL-C/LDL-C and apoA1/apoB ratios. Those fed the FO diet had only lower VLDL-C and triglycerides and higher HDL-C and HDL-C/LDL-C ratio. Whereas FO associated with RPO in the same diet had the same effect as FO alone, FO associated with CPO tends to reinforce the effect of CPO. This is particularly true for the effects on apoB and apoA1 which were found to be synergistically depressed and enhanced, respectively. Given the role played by these biological constants as predictors of CVD in humans, and in spite of the fact that these predictors are not relevant in rats, these results would suggest the potential interest of CPO or the association of CPO with FO in human nutrition.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Associations of antioxidant enzymes with cataract and age-related macular degeneration. The POLA Study. Pathologies Oculaires Liées à l'Age.
- Author
-
Delcourt C, Cristol JP, Léger CL, Descomps B, and Papoz L
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cataract epidemiology, Cataract pathology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Macular Degeneration epidemiology, Macular Degeneration pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Cataract enzymology, Glutathione Peroxidase blood, Macular Degeneration enzymology, Superoxide Dismutase blood
- Abstract
Objective: Oxidative mechanisms may play an important role in the etiology of cataract and age-related macular degeneration (AMD). The authors present the level of two antioxidant enzymes in relation to cataract and AMD., Design: Population-based, cross-sectional study on cataract and AMD and their risk factors., Participants: This study includes 2584 participants recruited among the residents of the town of Sète (in the south of France), who were 60 years of age or older., Intervention/methods: Cataract was defined on the basis of slit-lamp examination, according to the Lens Opacities Classification System III, and AMD on the basis of fundus photographs according to an international classification. Biologic measurements were made centrally from blood samples for which the patient fasted., Main Outcome Measures: The presence of early and late AMD and of subcapsular, cortical, nuclear, and mixed cataracts was assessed and related to the levels of plasma glutathione peroxidase and erythrocyte superoxide dismutase., Results: After multivariate adjustment, higher levels of plasma glutathione peroxidase (pIGPx) were significantly associated with a ninefold increase in late AMD prevalence, a sixfold increase in cortical cataract, and a twofold increase in nuclear and mixed cataracts. High levels of erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity were not associated with late AMD and early signs of AMD but were associated with a twofold increase in nuclear cataract., Conclusion: The authors show here, for the first time, a strong association of high levels of pIGPx with age-related eye diseases. High levels of SOD also are associated with increased risk of nuclear cataract. More data are needed at the biochemical and epidemiologic levels for a better understanding of these findings.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Suspicion of latent delta5-desaturase and peroxisomal beta-oxidation deficiency in elderly women over 75 years of age.
- Author
-
Babin F, Abderrazik M, Favier F, Cristol JP, Léger CL, Papoz L, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Aged, Delta-5 Fatty Acid Desaturase, Fatty Acid Desaturases deficiency, Fatty Acids, Essential, Female, Humans, Linoleic Acid blood, Vegetables, Dietary Fats, Fatty Acid Desaturases metabolism, Microbodies metabolism, Phospholipids blood, Triglycerides blood
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Vitamin E inhibition of O2*- production in the promonocyte cell line THP-1 is essentially due to RRR-delta-tocopherol.
- Author
-
Brillant L, Léger CL, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Calcitriol pharmacology, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Cell Differentiation physiology, Cell Line, Humans, Interferon-gamma pharmacology, Monocytes, NADPH Oxidases metabolism, Tretinoin pharmacology, Vitamin E chemistry, Superoxides metabolism, Vitamin E pharmacology
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Monocyte superoxide production is inversely related to normal content of alpha-tocopherol in low-density lipoprotein.
- Author
-
Cachia O, Léger CL, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Arteriosclerosis metabolism, Cells, Cultured, Free Radical Scavengers metabolism, Humans, Lipoproteins, LDL chemistry, Lipoproteins, LDL metabolism, Oxidative Stress, Vitamin E chemistry, Vitamin E metabolism, Lipoproteins, LDL pharmacology, Monocytes metabolism, Superoxides metabolism, Vitamin E pharmacology
- Abstract
Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) is a potent peroxyl radical scavenger. According to the oxidative theory of atherosclerosis, it prevents oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and thereby lowers the risk of cardiovascular disease. It also mediates cell actions, and specifically decreases monocyte superoxide anion-production (O2.--production), which is involved in LDL oxidation. We investigated whether alpha-tocopherol-containing LDL decreases this production in a manner dependent on the LDL alpha-tocopherol content (the alpha-tocopherol/apoB molar ratio) in human, phorbol ester-stimulated, adherent monocytes. We found that O2.--production was inhibited by native LDL (n-LDL) in a manner highly sensitive to the increasing alpha-tocopherol content (range 4.5 8). In addition: (1) inhibition was greater when alpha-tocopherol was associated to acetylated LDL (ac-LDL), the maximal percentage of inhibition being 80% as opposed to 35% for n-LDL; (2) the alpha-tocopherol overloading of either form of LDL did not produce further inhibition; (3) the free form of alpha-tocopherol produced lower inhibition compared with the lipoprotein-associated forms; (4) inhibition was not related to the cell content of alpha-tocopherol. We propose that the cell targeting of alpha-tocopherol is crucial to the inhibition of monocyte O2.--production, and thus that the role of normal LDL-alpha-tocopherol contents (range 6-8) in the prevention of atherogenic processes needs to be reexamined.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A short-term supplementation of pregnant women before delivery does not improve significantly the vitamin E status of neonates--low efficiency of the vitamin E placental transfer.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Dumontier C, Fouret G, Boulot P, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Female, Fetal Blood chemistry, Humans, Infant, Newborn blood, Pregnancy, Time Factors, Vitamin E blood, Dietary Supplements, Infant, Newborn metabolism, Maternal-Fetal Exchange drug effects, Vitamin E administration & dosage
- Abstract
Little is known about lipid-soluble vitamin placental transfer. We supplemented ten pregnant women ranging in age from 26 to 38 years with vitamin E at a daily dose of 1 g dl-alpha-tocopherol acetate for 3 days before delivery. All pregnancies ranged from 37 to 39 weeks of gestation at the time of the study. Maternal blood was first drawn during the week preceding supplementation and then just before the delivery by hysterotomy. Neonatal blood was from cord at birth. Supplementation dramatically increased the plasma and red blood cell vitamin E of the mothers. This was true whatever the expression of the vitamin E content, i.e., plasma lipid-normalized or non-normalized vitamin E, and red blood cell vitamin E related to volume of packed cells or to membrane-phospholipid phosphorus. In contrast, the plasma vitamin E content was very low in neonates (3.51 +/- 0.38 mg/L) and did not significantly differ from that reported in a previous paper, where plasma was drawn from fetal cord blood of pregnant non-supplemented women belonging to the same geographical population (Cachia et al., Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 1995; 173: 42-51). This strongly suggests that the transfer of vitamin E through the placental barrier is very low. That the plasma lipid-normalized levels of mothers before supplementation and of neonates did not significantly differ also suggests that the paucity of lipids in the circulating blood of neonates is the cause of the restricted amount of plasma vitamin E. Therefore, the low level of vitamin E in neonates may result from both low maternal placental transfer and neonatal lipid transport peculiarities.
- Published
- 1998
33. Red blood cell vitamin E concentrations in fetuses are related to but lower than those in mothers during gestation. A possible association with maternal lipoprotein (a) plasma levels.
- Author
-
Cachia O, Léger CL, Boulot P, Vernet MH, Michel F, Crastes de Paulet A, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Adult, Apolipoproteins blood, Female, Humans, Lipids blood, Pregnancy, Vitamin E physiology, Erythrocytes chemistry, Fetal Blood chemistry, Lipoprotein(a) blood, Vitamin E blood
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose was to establish which blood characteristic of vitamin E status were highly correlated between mothers and fetuses during gestation., Study Design: Twenty-four pregnant women were selected because of suspicion of toxoplasmosis or other disease and malformation or intrauterine growth delay justifying cord blood puncture. After maternal and fetal blood was collected, analyses of plasma and red blood cell vitamin E contents were performed together with analyses of standard lipid parameters and lipoprotein (a) in maternal plasma and fatty acid compositions of maternal and fetal red blood cells., Results: The maternal population was characterized by a plasma lipid-normalized vitamin E mean content higher (3.5 mmol/mol lipids) than usually found in nonpregnant adults. There was no relationship between plasma and red blood cell vitamin E contents. This was also true for fetuses. When the vitamin E status of mothers was compared with that of fetuses, we found no correlation in plasma vitamin E in the whole population and in the high lipoprotein (a) (> 300 mg/L) and low lipoprotein (a) (< 300 mg/L) groups. In contrast, statistically significant correlations appeared between maternal and fetal red blood cell contents and red blood cell relative charges in vitamin E in the whole population, whereas still higher correlations occurred in the high lipoprotein (a) group (r = 0.94 for the red blood cell content). Improved correlations were also found in the high lipoprotein (a) group for the interrelationship between vitamin E and plasma lipid contents (cholesterol and triglycerides), whereas improvement was noted in the low lipoprotein (a) group by positive correlation between age and vitamin E red blood cell content or red blood cell relative charge., Conclusion: Determination of red blood cell vitamin E and plasma lipoprotein (a) in mothers could be useful in antenatal blood analysis in cases of risk of prematurity at birth, to prevent peroxidative membrane damage in neonates, and > 85% of the mothers in the current population would benefit from vitamin E supplementation from the viewpoint of the fetal red blood cell vitamin E requirement in spite of the rather high maternal lipid-normalized vitamin E plasma content.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The fatty acid bimodal action on superoxide anion production by human adherent monocytes under phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate or diacylglycerol activation can be explained by the modulation of protein kinase C and p47phox translocation.
- Author
-
Kadri-Hassani N, Léger CL, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Arachidonic Acid pharmacology, Blood Proteins isolation & purification, Blood Proteins metabolism, Cell Adhesion, Humans, Indicators and Reagents, Kinetics, Leukocytes, Mononuclear drug effects, NADPH Oxidases, Phosphoproteins isolation & purification, Phosphorylation, Diglycerides pharmacology, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified pharmacology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Myristic Acids pharmacology, NADPH Dehydrogenase blood, Phosphoproteins blood, Protein Kinase C blood, Superoxides blood, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate pharmacology
- Abstract
We studied the translocation of protein kinase C (PKC), the endogenous phosphorylation and presence in the membrane fraction of p47phox (the 47-kDa cytosolic component of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase), and the O-.2 production in human adherent monocytes (HAMs). This was performed under phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) or diacylglycerol stimulation after cell preincubation in the presence of either 13-methyltetradecanoate or arachidonate. At 3 nM and 30 microM, both fatty acids had enhancing and depressing effects, respectively, on PKC translocation and O-.2 production strictly depending on the PMA- or diacylglycerol-stimulated state of the cell. Endogenous phosphorylation and membrane presence of p47phox were markedly reinforced in PMA-stimulated HAMs in the presence as compared to the absence of 13-methyltetradecanoate. These results emphasize the fact that in intact cells the capacity of both FAs to potentiate or depress the HAM O-.2 production is mediated by a direct action on the PKC membrane translocation leading to a simultaneous endogenous phosphorylation and membrane translocation of p47phox. They confirm the recent findings (Kadri-Hassani, N., Léger, C. L., and Descomps, B. (1995) J. Lipid Med. Cell Signal. 11, 159-173) on the PKC-mediated, adherent monocyte-specific capacity of these fatty acids and others (with the exception of linear saturated fatty acids) to enhance the PMA-stimulated O-.2 production at nanomolar concentrations and to depress it at micromolar concentrations.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Effect of essential fatty acid deficiency on membrane fatty acid content and growth hormone stimulation of rat pituitaries during postnatal development.
- Author
-
Soares MC, Aléssio ML, Léger CL, Bluet-Pajot MT, Clauser H, Enjalbert A, Kordon C, and Wandscheer DE
- Subjects
- Animals, Arachidonic Acid metabolism, Erucic Acids metabolism, Fatty Acids, Essential administration & dosage, Fatty Acids, Unsaturated, Female, Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone pharmacology, Pituitary Gland, Anterior drug effects, Pituitary Gland, Anterior ultrastructure, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Cell Membrane metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Growth Hormone metabolism, Pituitary Gland, Anterior metabolism, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
- Abstract
Fatty acid composition of anterior pituitary cell membranes of rats deprived of essential fatty acids (EFA) and of rats receiving a standard diet was determined during postnatal development and in adults. Pregnant rats were fed an EFA-deficient diet and the offspring were fed the same diet after weaning. In parallel, effects of the diet on growth and on growth hormone (GH) responsiveness to GHRH stimulation were determined in control animals. Membrane content of arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) and of its elongation product adrenic acid (22:4n-6) increased regularly from day 2 to day 12 after birth. EFA-deficiency resulted on day 2 in increased oleic acid and in substitution of arachidonic and adrenic acids by corresponding elongation-desaturation products of oleic acid: eicosatrienoic (20:3n-9) and docosatrienoic (22:3n-9) acids. At the age of 24 days, n-9 series fatty acid reached the same level as in adult animals. Two-day-old EFA-deficient rats paradoxically exhibited a higher level of 20:4n-6 as compared to control rats. EFA-deficiency also decreased growth rate and GH pituitary responses to GHRH during the prepubertal period. These results suggest that changes in the lipid structure and in pituitary secretion properties elicited by EFA-deficiency depend upon the stage of development.
- Published
- 1995
36. Bimodal action of fatty acids on PMA-stimulated O2.- production in human adherent monocytes.
- Author
-
Kadri-Hassani N, Léger CL, Vachier I, and Descomps B
- Subjects
- Acridines, Anions, Cell Adhesion, Humans, Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic Acids pharmacology, Kinetics, Luminescent Measurements, Monocytes drug effects, Protein Kinase C metabolism, Superoxide Dismutase pharmacology, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified pharmacology, Monocytes metabolism, Superoxides blood, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate pharmacology
- Abstract
Not only unsaturated linear fatty acids, but also saturated monomethyl-branched fatty acids (MMBFAs), are provided by food. They are capable of penetrating into the membrane lipids and promoting lipid disorder. Both NADPH oxidase and protein kinase C (PKC) are bound to cell cytoplasmic membranes and are responsive to unesterified fatty acids (UEFAs). We found that the O2.- NADPH oxidase-mediated production of human adherent monocytes was modified by unsaturated linear and saturated branched UEFAs only in the presence of phorbol myristate acetate. This result together with our inhibition data indicated an action strictly linked to PKC activity. The type and intensity of action depended on the UEFA concentrations and chain structure. Nanomolar concentrations showed potentiating effects whereas micromolar (< CMC) concentrations displayed depressant influences MMBFAs were generally more active than the other FAs. With respect to the micromolar depressant effect, oleate and linoleate were as active and docosahexaenoate nearly as active as MMBFAs. As assessed by iso-15:0 or arachidonate action, such bimodal alteration did not occur in non-adherent monocytes and neutrophils. Certain UEFAs could be considered as 'cellular' anti-oxidants on the sites of adherent-monocyte recruitment.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. [Modulation by some fatty acids of protein kinase C-dependent NADPH oxidase in human adherent monocyte: mechanism of action, possible implication in atherogenesis].
- Author
-
Léger CL and Kadri-Hassani N
- Subjects
- Arteriosclerosis etiology, Carcinogens pharmacology, Cell Adhesion, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified metabolism, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Lipoproteins, LDL metabolism, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate pharmacology, Arteriosclerosis enzymology, Fatty Acids pharmacology, Monocytes enzymology, NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases metabolism, Protein Kinase C metabolism
- Abstract
It is largely admitted nowadays that the early stage of the atherosclerotic lesion involves formation of oxidized (and minimally oxidized) low-density lipoprotein. Their properties are briefly reviewed. It is recalled that a lipolytic process also takes place both at the lumenal surface and in the subendothelial space of the vessels implying lipoprotein lipase (LpL) activity. Recent studies emphasize the role of LpL in accumulating LDL in the vascular tissue (Rutledge & Golberg, J. Lipid Res., 1994, 35, 1152-1160), but the role of LpL-generated unesterified fatty acids (UEFA) in these two locations and their possible implication in atherogenesis are largely neglected. Physiological and pathophysiological significance of UEFA in the human adherent monocyte modulation of the superoxide anion (O2.-) production has been examined by our group, leading to a possible mechanism of modulation of LDL oxidative modification. The O2.- production-modulating effect of a 30-min UEFA preincubation has been studied in intact human adherent monocytes (HAM) after stimulation by a direct effector of protein kinase C (PKC). It has been established that UEFA alone (in the absence of PKC effectors) were not able to modulate the O2.- production of HAM whereas they had such a capacity in the presence of PKC effectors, phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) or diacylglycerol (DAG). In this case inhibitors of PKC such as GF 109203 X suppressed the modulating effect. UEFA have also been shown to possess a bimodal action in the presence of PKC effectors: they depressed or enhanced O2.- production at micromolar or nanomolar concentrations, respectively. All these results contrasted with others obtained in neutrophils or nonadherent monocytes, suggesting an absolute requirement of PKC for the phagocyte-NADPH oxydase (PHOX) activation especially in the case of HAM. In HAM, the maximal enhancing effects were obtained with monomethyl ramified saturated (MMRS) and linear unsaturated (LU) FAs such as arachidonic, eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids (with exception of oleic, linoleic and linolenic acids which were without effect), whereas the maximal depressing effects were obtained with MMRS-FAs and LU-FAS such as oleic, linoleic and docosahexaenoic acids. Further investigations in HAM led us to examine the UEFA capacity at modulating the translocation of PKC, on the one hand, and the endogenous phosphorylation and membrane translocation of p47phox, on the other, in the presence of PMA or DAG. Using 13-methyl myristic (iso15:0) as FA model, it has been established that i) it was able to amplify or diminish PKC translocation at nanomolar and micromolar concentrations, respectively (this was also the case with arachidonic acid) ii) it enhanced and depressed the endogenous phosphorylation and the membrane translocation of p47phox at nanomolar/micromolar concentrations and iii) it was inactive in the absence of PMA or DAG. Taken together, our results strongly suggest that the active UEFA act directly on the monocyte PKC, modifying its kinase activity through interactions with PMA/DAG binding site of the regulatory domain of the protein. This leads to modulate the phosphorylation and translocation of p47phox, which in turn allows the assembling of the active PHOX complex and triggers the O2.- production. The direct action of UEFA on the PKC regulatory-domain known to strongly interact with the membrane lipids was also supported by the fact that linear saturated FAs that have already been reported to be unable to penetrate a lipid layer were devoided of effect on monocytic O2.- production. The free form of oleic and linoleic acids and, to a lesser extent, docosahexaenoic acid (in the case of oral administration of fish oil) are present at micromolar concentrations in the plasma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
- Published
- 1995
38. Selective effect of a diet-induced decrease in the arachidonic acid membrane-phospholipid content on in vitro phospholipase C and adenylate cyclase-mediated pituitary response to angiotensin II.
- Author
-
Aléssio ML, Léger CL, Rasolonjanahary R, Wandscheer DE, Clauser H, Enjalbert A, and Kordon C
- Subjects
- Adenylyl Cyclases metabolism, Animals, Cells, Cultured, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Fatty Acids, Essential pharmacology, Female, Inositol Phosphates metabolism, Membrane Lipids isolation & purification, Phosphatidylcholines pharmacology, Phospholipids isolation & purification, Pituitary Gland drug effects, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Second Messenger Systems drug effects, Second Messenger Systems physiology, Type C Phospholipases metabolism, Angiotensin II pharmacology, Arachidonic Acid metabolism, Diet, Fat-Restricted, Membrane Lipids metabolism, Phospholipids metabolism, Pituitary Gland metabolism
- Abstract
Young rats were fed on an essential fatty acid (EFA)-deprived diet for 6 weeks after weaning. Their pituitary was removed and adenohypophyseal cells dispersed and maintained in culture. Membrane lipids were analyzed and basal and stimulated levels of hormone secretion were measured after 4-day incubation in a culture medium containing or not 160 microM arachidonic acid 20:4n-6 (AA) in order to obtain EFA-deficient or EFA-restored pituitary cells, respectively. In EFA-deficient cells membrane phosphoglycerides (PGL) were depleted in AA and adrenic acid 22:4n-6; the deficit was overcome by incubation in the presence of AA. Depletion diversely affected PGL classes. AA was highly depleted in choline phosphoglycerides (ChoPG), only moderately depleted in serine and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides (SerPG and EtnPG) and not depleted at all in inositol phosphoglycerides, suggesting preferential preservation of AA in that class of PGL. Restoration of AA by addition of the fatty acid to the culture medium was complete for ChoPG and EtnPG and only partial for SerPG. Depressed levels of AA and adrenic acid in PGL were compensated for by a concomitant increase in 20:3n-9 and 22:3n-9. Growth hormone and prolactin (PRL) secretion was assessed by radioimmunoassay and possible effects of a membrane AA deficit on hormone regulation were tested in cells challenged by either growth hormone-releasing hormone, thyrotropin-releasing hormone, angiotensin II (AII), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) or dopamine. Neither basal nor stimulated growth hormone secretion was different from controls in EFA-deficient cells. PRL modulation by VIP or dopamine was not affected either in EFA-deficient cells. In contrast, the capacity of AII, but not of thyrotropin-releasing hormone, to release PRL was markedly decreased in EFA-deprived cells. It was restored by addition of AA to the incubation medium. Parallel depression of AII-induced inositol phosphates and cAMP accumulation was also observed after EFA deficiency. When tested on membranes, the paradoxical inhibition of adenylate cyclase by AII documented by previous observations was reinforced in EFA-deficient membranes. In contrast, binding of AII was not affected by EFA deficiency. It is concluded that under our experimental conditions EFA deficiency affects selectively coupling of the AII receptor to its effectors without alteration of binding. The effect could involve changes in receptor interactions with coupling proteins.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Physicochemical approach of the function of the fatty acid incorporation in biological membranes.
- Author
-
Léger CL
- Subjects
- Animals, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Physical, Dietary Fats metabolism, Membrane Proteins metabolism, Fatty Acids physiology, Membrane Lipids physiology
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effect of an essential fatty acid deficiency on the phospholipid composition in anterior pituitary membranes.
- Author
-
Alessio ML, Wandscheer DE, Soares MC, Clauser H, Enjalbert A, Kordon C, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Animals, Arachidonic Acid analysis, Cell Membrane chemistry, Erucic Acids analysis, Fatty Acids, Essential analysis, Fatty Acids, Unsaturated, Male, Microsomes chemistry, Rats, Subcellular Fractions chemistry, Dietary Fats, Unsaturated metabolism, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Membrane Lipids chemistry, Phospholipids chemistry, Pituitary Gland, Anterior chemistry
- Abstract
The effects of an essential fatty acid deficient diet were investigated on the phospholipid fatty acids of several membrane fractions of the rat anterior pituitary, the secretion of which is known to be partly dependent on the membrane phospholipidic constituents. In standard dietary conditions, arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) and its elongation product, adrenic acid (22:4n-6), were the two main polyunsaturated fatty acids in all fractions studied. In rats deprived of EFA for 6 weeks after weaning, the levels of both 20:4n-6 and 22:4n-6 were not changed in microsomal + plasma membrane and nuclear fractions, whereas they were decreased in heavy mitochondrial and light mitochondrial fractions. The present data suggest a mechanism of compensation between membrane fractions which may preferentially preserve 20:4n-6 and 22:4n-6 in discrete membrane fractions.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Apparent relative retention of the phosphatidylethanolamine molecular species 18:0-20:5(n-3), 16:0-22:6(n-3) and the sum 16:0-20:4(n-6) plus 16:0-20:3(n-9) in the liver microsomes of pig on an essential fatty acid deficient diet.
- Author
-
Menguy L, Christon R, Van Dorsselaer A, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Gas, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Dietary Fats pharmacology, Intracellular Membranes metabolism, Mass Spectrometry, Membrane Lipids metabolism, Swine, Diet, Fatty Acids administration & dosage, Microsomes, Liver metabolism, Phosphatidylethanolamines metabolism
- Abstract
Attempts at a better understanding of the cell membrane organization and functioning need to assess the physical properties which partly depend (i) on the positional distribution of the fatty acids in the membrane phospholipids (PLs) and (ii) on the way by which the PL molecular species are affected by exogenous fatty acids. To do that, the effects of essential (polyunsaturated) fatty acid (EFA) deficiency and enrichment were studied in the liver microsomes of piglets feeding on either an EFA-deficient diet or an EFA-enriched diet containing hydrogenated coconut oil or a mixture of soya + corn oils, respectively. After derivatization, the diacylated forms of choline and ethanolamine PLs were analyzed using a combination of chromatographic techniques and fast-atom bombardment-mass spectrometry. The dinitrobenzoyl-diacylglycerol derivatives corresponding to the molecular species of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) were identified. It appears that three factors brought about a marked apparent relative retention: the nature of (i) the base of the polar head, (ii) fatty acids at the sn-1 position and (iii) fatty acids at the sn-2 position. The highest apparent relative retentions were displayed by the 18:0-20:5(n-3)-PE and 16:0-22:6(n-3)-PE. It is noteworthy that the behavior of 20:3 n-9--which is synthesized during the EFA-deficient diet by the same bioconversion system as 20:4 n-6--was very similar to that of 20:4 n-6 during the formation of PC and PE molecular species and that the molecular species of PE containing 20:4(n-6) and 20:3(n-9), gathered together as metabolical homologues, were also apparently retained, particularly in association with 16:0. Present observations are consistent with some others showing retention or preferential distribution of EFA in PE and suggest that specific acyltransferase(s), ethanolamine phosphotransferase and methyltransferase would be mainly involved for PE and PC formation in liver endoplasmic reticulum. Fast-atom bombardment-mass spectrometry of intact phospholipids enables us to show that there is no very long chain dipolyunsaturated phospholipid in liver endoplasmic reticulum.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Effect of essential fatty acid deficiency on lipid composition of basolateral plasma membrane of pig intestinal mucosal cells.
- Author
-
Duranthon V, Frémont L, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane chemistry, Cholesterol analysis, Chromatography, Gas, Diet, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Male, Phosphatidylcholines analysis, Phosphatidylethanolamines analysis, Swine, Fatty Acids analysis, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Intestinal Mucosa chemistry, Lipids analysis
- Abstract
The effect of essential fatty acid (EFA) deficiency on the lipid composition of basolateral plasma membranes (BPM) from intestinal mucosal cells was investigated in weaning pigs fed control or EFA-deficient diets for 12 weeks. The phospholipid and cholesterol contents relative to protein were similar in both groups, showing a cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio of 0.6. The distribution of phospholipid classes was also unaffected by the diet. In contrast, fatty acid profiles of the two phospholipid main classes, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidyl-ethanolamine were altered by EFA deficiency. Linoleic acid (18:2n-6) was largely reduced, whereas arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) only slightly decreased in EFA-deficient pigs. The unsaturation index was essentially maintained by high levels of oleic acid (18:1n-9) and by conversion of oleic acid to 5,8,11-eicosatrienoic acid (20:3n-9). Finally, during the period of EFA deficiency, the lipid composition of BPM of the intestinal mucosal cells was little affected, suggesting a preferential uptake of 20:4n-6 and (or) precursor mobilized from other tissues. However, an effect of dietary treatment on the function of membrane-associated proteins cannot be ruled out.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Evidence for a structurally specific role of essential polyunsaturated fatty acids depending on their peculiar double-bond distribution in biomembranes.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Daveloose D, Christon R, and Viret J
- Subjects
- Animals, Dietary Fats pharmacology, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Fatty Acids, Essential chemistry, Ileum chemistry, Linoleic Acid, Linoleic Acids administration & dosage, Linoleic Acids pharmacology, Membrane Lipids chemistry, Microvilli chemistry, Molecular Structure, Structure-Activity Relationship, Swine, Fatty Acids, Essential physiology, Membrane Lipids physiology
- Abstract
ESR spectrometry with 5-, 7-, 10-, and 12-doxylstearate probes and a combined index considering separately the double-bond numbers of essential and nonessential fatty acids were used to investigate the structural role of the double bonds of polyunsaturated fatty esters in membrane phosphoglycerides. Purified brush border membrane vesicles were prepared from the jejunum of piglets receiving either high (HLA) or low (LLA) dietary levels of linoleic acid (18:2 n-6). In the LLA as compared to the HLA group, there were no significant modifications of (a) the relative contents of cholesterol, phospholipid, and protein and of (b) the phosphoglyceride class distribution, contrasting with very large changes in the fatty acid compositions of each phosphoglyceride. These changes were characterized by an increase in nonessential monoene and triene (18:1 n-9 and 20:3 n-9) and a decrease in essential diene (18:2 n-6) in LLA- as compared to HLA-fed piglets. The essential tetraene 20:4 n-6 remained rather constant despite an overall nonsignificant increase in the LLA group. The total double-bond number (TDBn) was not significantly affected, contrasting with the variations in the double-bond numbers of essential and nonessential fatty acids (DBn(EFA) and DBn(nonEFA), respectively). The combined DBn(EFA)/DBn(nonEFA) index was 1.7-3.3 times lower in LLA than in HLA membrane phospholipids. It was concluded that the diet was able to affect the double-bond distribution in the upper and inner half-parts of the membrane leaflet without changing the total number of double bonds.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Diet-induced alterations of lipids during cell differentiation in the small intestine of growing rats: effect of an essential fatty acid deficiency.
- Author
-
Alessandri JM, Arfi TS, Thevenoux J, and Léger CL
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Differentiation, Fatty Acids, Essential metabolism, In Vitro Techniques, Intestinal Mucosa analysis, Intestinal Mucosa cytology, Intestine, Small analysis, Intestine, Small cytology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Diet, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Intestine, Small growth & development, Lipids analysis
- Abstract
The lipid components of columnar cells harvested from rat small intestine were analyzed at each step of cell maturation. The effect of dietary lipids on the evolution of lipids in differentiating cells was studied using two diets representative either of a control or of an essential polyunsaturated fatty acid deficient lipid supply. Two groups of weanling rats were fed a semisynthetic diet composed of corn oil (control diet) or hydrogenated coconut oil (deficient diet) for 11 weeks. Intestinal cells were extracted according to their position along the villus column. Linoleic and arachidonic acids constitutive of cell phospholipids increased as cells migrated from the lower to the mid-part of the crypt-villus axis only with the control diet. This gradient disappeared after a 3-week feeding period with hydrogenated coconut oil diet so that columnar cells of essential fatty acid deficient rats exhibited the same overall fatty acid composition all along the crypt-villus axis. Essential fatty acid deficiency resulted in an increase of both the triene to tetraene and arachidonic acid to linoleic acid weight ratios regardless of the maturational step of cells. As compared to the control diet, the essential fatty acid deficient diet induced a decrease of both the cholesterol and free fatty acid to phospholipid molar ratios only in lower villus cells. We conclude that (a) progressive compositional modifications of lipids occur while ascending the crypt-villus axis and (b) essential fatty acid deficiency induces substantial alterations of the lipid evolution normally linked to cell differentiation.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Nutrition and biomembranes: additional information concerning the incidence of dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids on membrane organization and biological activity.
- Author
-
Léger CL, Christon R, Viret J, Daveloose D, Mitjavila S, and Even V
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Thin Layer, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Intracellular Membranes analysis, Membrane Proteins analysis, Phospholipids analysis, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Swine, Microsomes, Liver analysis, Microvilli analysis
- Abstract
One of the important questions in biomembranes now is: Do the essential fatty acids (polyunsaturated fatty acids of the n-6 and n-3 series) play an original structural role in the arrangement of the lipid matrix capable, in particular, of triggering modifications of intrinsic protein activities? Preliminary results from our laboratories are presented in rat and piglet fed standard or essential fatty acid-deficient diets. The relative amounts of 18:2 (n-6) and 20:4 (n-6) in total fatty acids of hepatic microsome or enterocyte brush border membrane phospholipids are closely dependent on the type of diet (a globally decreasing effect with deficiency), whereas no differences were observed with relative amounts of cholesterol, phospholipids, and proteins. This effect of deficiency on membrane fatty acids has to be compared to the decreasing specific activities of microsome NADPH-cytochrome c reductase or aniline hydroxylase (studied in rat), to the increasing order of the structure of both membrane microsome and brush border lipid matrix (studied in both rat and piglet), and to the increasing mobility (or accessibility) of the membrane-protein surface-bonded spin-label (studied in the piglet brush border membrane), suggesting a probably defective protein-lipid fit in the case of deficiency. These results could favor conformational change in the whole membrane structure (i.e. proteins and lipids). The specificity of these effects remains to be assessed.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Modification of fluidity and lipid-protein relationships in pig intestinal brush-border membrane by dietary essential fatty acid deficiency.
- Author
-
Christon R, Even V, Daveloose D, Léger CL, and Viret J
- Subjects
- 8,11,14-Eicosatrienoic Acid metabolism, Animals, Arachidonic Acid, Arachidonic Acids metabolism, Cholesterol metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Linoleic Acid, Linoleic Acids metabolism, Phosphatidylcholines metabolism, Phospholipids metabolism, Sphingomyelins metabolism, Spin Labels metabolism, Swine, Fatty Acids, Essential deficiency, Intestines ultrastructure, Membrane Fluidity, Membrane Lipids metabolism, Membrane Proteins metabolism, Microvilli metabolism
- Abstract
The effect of dietary essential fatty acid (EFA) deficiency on the dynamic molecular organization of pig intestinal brush-border membrane (BBM) was studied using purified BBM vesicles. A 6 week dietary treatment of weaning piglets induced a typical EFA-deficient pattern in the lipid composition of both plasma and epithelial membranes. In pigs fed on the EFA-deficient diet, the plasma 20:3(n - 9)/20:4(n - 6) ratio progressively increased and reached a stable value after 3 weeks of experiment, whereas it remained low (less than 0.2) in controls. In the intestinal BBM, the cholesterol/protein, phospholipid/protein and consequently the cholesterol/phospholipid ratios, as well as the phospholipid class distribution, were unchanged. In particular, the sphingomyelin/phosphatidylcholine (SM/PC) molar ratio was not affected. However, the fatty acid composition of phospholipid main classes was markedly modified, leading to decreased lipid fluidity and to a large change in membrane protein behaviour with EFA deficiency. These findings could be interpreted in terms of reduced lipid-protein interactions. Moreover, the increasing gradient of fluidity which took place within the lipidic matrix from its surface was modified by the dietary treatment, as fluidity was lowered by EFA deficiency at different depths of the layer.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.