TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of dietary Trans-fat on biliary and fecal steroid excretion and serum lipoproteins in rats
AU - Sugano, Michihiro
AU - Watanabe, Midori
AU - Kohno, Mitsuko
AU - Cho, Young J.
AU - Ide, Takashi
PY - 1983/5
Y1 - 1983/5
N2 - Rats were fed cholesterol-free or cholesterol-enriched diets containing olive oil or partially hydrogenated corn oil at the 10% level for ca. 30 days (c-18:1, 77.0% in the former diet and c-18:1, 24.7% and t-18:1, 42.5% in the latter). The linoleic acid content of these fat diets was made equivalent (1.7 energy%). After feeding cholesterol-free diets, trans fat compared to cis fat showed(a) no untoward effects on growth parameters, (b) a reduction of serum cholesterol levels without influencing concentrations of serum apolipoproteins A-I, B and E, (c) no effects on the bile flow and the concentration of biliary cholesterol and bile acids, (d) an increasing trend of fecal excretion of neutral and acidic steroids, both in terms of mg/day and mg/g feces, and (e) rather equivocal change in the composition of fecal, but not biliary steroids. Similar response patterns were also observed when cholesterol-enriched diets were fed except for a decrease in serum apo B and an ineffectiveness to increase fecal acidic steroids. Together with the results obtained from experiments simultaneously performed with safflower oil and completely hydrogenated corn oil, it seems that the steroid metabolism can be specificallymodified by the geometry of dietary fats.
AB - Rats were fed cholesterol-free or cholesterol-enriched diets containing olive oil or partially hydrogenated corn oil at the 10% level for ca. 30 days (c-18:1, 77.0% in the former diet and c-18:1, 24.7% and t-18:1, 42.5% in the latter). The linoleic acid content of these fat diets was made equivalent (1.7 energy%). After feeding cholesterol-free diets, trans fat compared to cis fat showed(a) no untoward effects on growth parameters, (b) a reduction of serum cholesterol levels without influencing concentrations of serum apolipoproteins A-I, B and E, (c) no effects on the bile flow and the concentration of biliary cholesterol and bile acids, (d) an increasing trend of fecal excretion of neutral and acidic steroids, both in terms of mg/day and mg/g feces, and (e) rather equivocal change in the composition of fecal, but not biliary steroids. Similar response patterns were also observed when cholesterol-enriched diets were fed except for a decrease in serum apo B and an ineffectiveness to increase fecal acidic steroids. Together with the results obtained from experiments simultaneously performed with safflower oil and completely hydrogenated corn oil, it seems that the steroid metabolism can be specificallymodified by the geometry of dietary fats.
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U2 - 10.1007/BF02537235
DO - 10.1007/BF02537235
M3 - Article
C2 - 6877041
AN - SCOPUS:0020503561
SN - 0024-4201
VL - 18
SP - 375
EP - 381
JO - Lipids
JF - Lipids
IS - 5
ER -