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Title: Effect of dietary fish oil on the sensitivity of hepatic lipid metabolism to regulation by insulin. Author: Baker PW, Gibbons GF. Journal: J Lipid Res; 2000 May; 41(5):719-26. PubMed ID: 10787432. Abstract: The contribution of dietary fat content and type to changes in the sensitivity of hepatic lipid metabolism to insulin was studied in primary hepatocyte cultures from donor rats maintained on a low-fat diet (LF), or on diets enriched in olive oil (OO) or fish oil (FO). The higher rate of fatty acid oxidation in hepatocytes from the FO-fed group was resistant to the inhibitory effects of insulin observed in hepatocytes from the other groups. Insulin stimulation of fatty acid incorporation into triglyceride (TG) was also less pronounced in hepatocytes from the FO-fed group than in those from the OO-fed group but there was no difference in the stimulatory effect of insulin on fatty acid incorporation into phospholipid (PL) in these two groups. In the case of fatty acid incorporation into both PL and TG, hepatocytes from the LF group were refractory to stimulation by insulin. At each concentration of insulin, hepatocytes from the FO-fed group secreted less very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) TG than those from the other groups. However, the absolute suppression of VLDL TG secretion by insulin was similar irrespective of the diet of the donor animals.We conclude that chronic consumption of a particular type of dietary fat does not affect the insulin sensitivity of the major pathways of hepatic lipid metabolism in a consistent manner.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]