Abstract
The effect of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), in particular conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), on Ca and bone metabolism is unclear. In a 2 × 2 factorial design study, forty male 4-week-old rats were fed a control diet containing 70 g added fat (soyabean oil (SBO; n –6 PUFA-rich diet) or menhaden oil–safflower oil (MSO; n −3 PUFA-rich diet))/kg diet with 0 or 10 g CLA/kg for 8 weeks. Ex vivo prostaglandin E 2 biosynthesis by bone organ culture was significantly higher ( P <0·001) in rats consuming SBO compared with MSO, irrespective of CLA. Addition of the CLA treatment to either diet further lowered ( P <0·05) ex vivo prostaglandin E 2 production. Neither PUFA type nor CLA altered circulating or femoral mRNA levels of osteocalcin (a marker of bone formation) or insulin-like growth factor-I (a mediator of bone metabolism). While urinary pyridinium crosslinks levels (markers of bone resorption) were unaffected by CLA irrespective of PUFA type, they were significantly higher ( P <0·05) in rats consuming SBO compared with MSO irrespective of CLA. Net fractional (%) and absolute (mg) Ca absorption were significantly ( P <0·01 and P <0·05 respectively) higher in CLA-supplemented than unsupplemented animals fed on the n −3 PUFA-rich diet, whereas CLA had no effect in animals fed the n –6 PUFA-rich diet. There was no effect of CLA supplementation on bone mineral mass. In conclusion, CLA supplementation over 8 weeks appeared to enhance Ca absorption in young growing rats fed an n −3 PUFA-rich diet, but had no measurable effect on bone metabolism or bone mass over this time frame.
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CITATION STYLE
Kelly, O., Cusack, S., Jewell, C., & Cashman, K. D. (2003). The effect of polyunsaturated fatty acids, including conjugated linoleic acid, on calcium absorption and bone metabolism and composition in young growing rats. British Journal of Nutrition, 90(4), 743–750. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn2003951
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