Sunflower Oil but Not Fish Oil Resembles Positive Effects of Virgin Olive Oil on Aged Pancreas after Life-Long Coenzyme Q Addition
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
González-Alonso, Adrián; Ramírez Tortosa, César Luis; Varela López, Alfonso; Roche, Enrique; Arribas, María I.; Ramírez Tortosa, María Carmen; Giampieri, Francesca; Ochoa Herrera, Julio José; Quiles Morales, José LuisEditorial
MDPI
Materia
β-cell endocrine pancreas exocrine pancreas
Fecha
2015-09-29Referencia bibliográfica
González Alonso, A. et. al. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2015, 16. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms161023425]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (AGL2008-01057) and the Autonomous Government of Andalucia (AGR832); CIBEROBN 12/03/30038 (Fisiopatologia de la Obesidad y la Nutrición, Instituto de Salud Carlos III); PROMETEO 2012/007 (Generalitat Valenciana); Spanish Ministry of Health (Red de Envejecimiento y Fragilidad RD06/0013/0012, PI04/0355, and PI05/2214); VALi+d APOSTD/2012/021 from Generalitat ValencianaResumen
An adequate pancreatic structure is necessary for optimal organ function.
Structural changes are critical in the development of age-related pancreatic disorders.
In this context, it has been reported that different pancreatic compartments from rats were
affected according to the fat composition consumed. Since there is a close relationship
between mitochondria, oxidative stress and aging, an experimental approach has been
developed to gain more insight into this process in the pancreas. A low dosage of coenzyme
Q was administered life-long in rats in order to try to prevent pancreatic aging-related alterations associated to some dietary fat sources. According to that, three groups of rats
were fed normocaloric diets containing Coenzyme Q (CoQ) for two years, where virgin
olive, sunflower, or fish oil was included as unique fat source. Pancreatic samples for
microscopy and blood samples were collected at the moment of euthanasia. The main finding
is that CoQ supplementation gives different results according to fat used in diet. When
sunflower oil was the main fat in the diet, CoQ supplementation seems to improve endocrine
pancreas structure and in particular β-cell mass resembling positive effects of virgin olive oil.
Conversely, CoQ intake does not seem to improve the structural alterations of exocrine
compartment previously observed in fish oil fed rats. Therefore CoQ may improve pancreatic
alterations associated to the chronic intake of some dietary fat sources.