Abstract
The dietary bioequivalence during the brain growth spurt of α-linolenic (LNA) and docosahexaenoic acids (DHA) as substrates for brain and retinal n- 3 fatty acid accretion is reported for the fetal baboons, whose mothers consumed a long chain polyunsaturate-free diet with a n-6/n-3 ratio of 10:1. Pregnant baboons received i.v. doses of U-13C-labeled fatty acids (LNA or DHA), plasma was collected from mother and fetus, and fetal brain (occipital cortex), retina, and liver were analyzed at various times post-dose. Fetal brain DHA plateaued 15-35 d post-dose with 1.6% of the preformed [U-13C- ]DHA dose recovered in the brain. In contrast, LNA-derived DHA accretion also plateaued but was 20-fold lower. Liver and retinal results were of the same order of magnitude, but showed evidence of peaks and decline. Conversion products to n-3 long chain polyunsaturate were observed in the maternal circulation at 1 h after administration, as was transfer of both fatty acids to the fetus. From these measurements we estimate that a dietary level of about 0.45% of energy as LNA is sufficient to meet the requirements of the growing fetal brain, whereas 0.03% of energy as DHA would suffice. These data are the first direct measurements of the bioequivalence of DHA and LNA in developing primates and imply that n-3 fatty acid requirements for the developing fetal brain can be met by attainable dietary LNA for diets low in long chain polyunsaturates.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Greiner, C., Winter, J., Nathanielsz, P. V., & Brenna, J. (1997). Brain docosahexaenoate accretion in fetal baboons: Bioequivalence of dietary α-linolenic and docosahexaenoic acids. Pediatric Research, 42(6), 826–834. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199712000-00018
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.