Effects of isomers of conjugated linoleic acid on porcine adipocyte growth and differentiation
2003
McNeel, R.L. | Mersmann, H.J.
Conjugated linoleic acids (CLAs) decrease fat deposition in mammals, including pigs. To determine mechanisms for CLA effects on adipocyte growth, porcine stromal-vascular cells (preadipocytes) were isolated and plated in medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum. After 24 h, differentiation factors (insulin + hydrocortisone + transferrin) were added. Oleic acid (200 micromolar) was added to some plates as a positive control. One of two isomers of CLA (50 micromolar cis 9, trans 11 or 50 micromolar trans 10, cis 12), or a mixture of the two isomers (25 micromolar each) was added to other plates. The cell number increased 7+ times in 7 days after initiation of differentiation, and was not different among treatment groups. By 7 days, Oil Red O-stained material (OROSM), expressed per cell, increased 10+ times in control cells and 64 times in oleic acid-treated cells. Addition of either isomer of CLA or the mixture caused OROSM/cell to increase 10+ times at 2 days, with no further increase at later times. In CLA-treated cells there was no increase in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) or lipoprotein lipase mRNA concentrations. The increased OROSM/cell may represent triacylglycerol synthesis from medium CLA using existing biosynthetic capacity or provision of a limiting ligand for PPARgamma already present. The results are different from those observed with rodent-derived clonal cells (3T3-L1 cells), wherein proliferation and differentiation are inhibited by CLAs, and the active isomer is trans 10, cis 12-CLA. The results suggest distinctions between clonal and primary preadipocytes, or species differences.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]