Abstract
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) ingestion enhanced the susceptibility of rat liver and kidney to lipid peroxidation as a function of the dietary DHA level, but did not increase lipid peroxides as assessed by thiobarbituric acid (TBA) values to the level expected from the peroxidizability index of the tissue total lipids. This phenomenon was especially prominent in the liver. In the liver, the higher proportion of DHA in the non-phosphorus lipids might play an important role in lessening the susceptibility of the tissue to lipid peroxidation. In the brain and testis, on the other hand, lipid peroxide levels were decreased when DHA was given to the animals. In the testis, in particular, the proportion of DHA in total lipids was lowest among all tissues examined, even when a relatively high level of DHA had been ingested, and this could be related to the low lipid peroxide level. Therefore, the protection against lipid peroxidation differed from tissue to tissue, even from the viewpoint of the fatty acid composition of the tissue lipids. In addition, changes in the lipid peroxide levels of the liver, kidney, brain and testis, as assessed by TBA values, seemed to be associated with changes in the peroxidizability index of phosphatidylcholine (+ cardiolipin) in each tissue.