Journal of Lipid Research (Sep 2012)

Effects of Therapeutic Lifestyle Change diets high and low in dietary fish-derived FAs on lipoprotein metabolism in middle-aged and elderly subjects

  • Esther M.M. Ooi,
  • Alice H. Lichtenstein,
  • John S. Millar,
  • Margaret R. Diffenderfer,
  • Stefania Lamon-Fava,
  • Helen Rasmussen,
  • Francine K. Welty,
  • P. Hugh R. Barrett,
  • Ernst J. Schaefer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 9
pp. 1958 – 1967

Abstract

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The effects of Therapeutic Lifestyle Change (TLC) diets, low and high in dietary fish, on apolipoprotein metabolism were examined. Subjects were provided with a Western diet for 6 weeks, followed by 24 weeks of either of two TLC diets (10/group). Apolipoprotein kinetics were determined in the fed state using stable isotope methods and compartmental modeling at the end of each phase. Only the high-fish diet decreased median triglyceride-rich lipoprotein (TRL) apoB-100 concentration (−23%), production rate (PR, −9%), and direct catabolism (−53%), and increased TRL-to-LDL apoB-100 conversion (+39%) as compared with the baseline diet (all P < 0.05). This diet also decreased TRL apoB-48 concentration (−24%), fractional catabolic rate (FCR, −20%), and PR (−50%) as compared with the baseline diet (all P < 0.05). The high-fish and low-fish diets decreased LDL apoB-100 concentration (−9%, −23%), increased LDL apoB-100 FCR (+44%, +48%), and decreased HDL apoA-I concentration (−15%, −14%) and PR (−11%, −12%) as compared with the baseline diet (all P < 0.05). On the high-fish diet, changes in TRL apoB-100 PR were negatively correlated with changes in plasma eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids. In conclusion, the high-fish diet decreased TRL apoB-100 and TRL apoB-48 concentrations chiefly by decreasing their PR. Both diets decreased LDL apoB-100 concentration by increasing LDL apoB-100 FCR and decreased HDL apoA-I concentration by decreasing HDL apoA-I PR.

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