Effects of Age and Diet on Triglyceride Metabolism in Mice

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Abstract

Background

Both age and diet can contribute to alterations in triglyceride metabolism and subsequent metabolic disease. In humans, plasma triglyceride levels increase with age. Diets high in saturated fats can increase triglyceride levels while diets high in omega-3 fatty acids decrease triglyceride levels. Here we asked how age and long-term diet effected triglyceride metabolism in mice.

Methods

We fed male and female mice a low-fat diet, a western diet, or a diet high in polyunsaturated and omega-3 (n-3) fatty acids for up to 2 years. We measured survival, body composition, plasma triglyceride levels, chylomicron clearance, and oral fat, glucose, and insulin tolerance.

Results

Triglyceride levels in mice did not increase with age, regardless of diet. Oral fat tolerance increased with age, while chylomicron clearance remained unchanged. Mice fed western diet had decreased survival. Interestingly, mice fed the n-3 diet gained more lean mass, and had lower insulin levels than mice fed either low-fat or western diet. Moreover, triglyceride uptake into the hearts of mice fed the n-3 diet was strikingly higher than in other groups.

Conclusions

In mice, age-induced changes in triglyceride metabolism did not match those in humans. Our data suggested that mice, like humans, had decreased fat absorption with age, but plasma triglyceride clearance did not decrease with age in mice, resulting in lower plasma triglyceride levels and improved oral fat tolerance with age. A chronic diet high in n-3 fatty acids increased insulin sensitivity and uptake of triglycerides specifically into the heart but how these observations are connected is unclear.

Research Perspectives

  • The changes in triglyceride metabolism that occur with age in humans are not reflected in a mouse model, thus mice are likely not an ideal model for understanding how age impacts lipid metabolism and subsequent metabolic disease.

  • A fish-oil based high-fat diet high in omega-3 fatty acids significantly increases fatty acid uptake in the heart while at the same time decreases fasting insulin levels.

  • In future studies it will be important to understand how the omega-3 fatty acid induced increase in fatty acid uptake affects cardiac function and how it is related to other phenotypes induced by omega-3 fatty acids.

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