Any feedback?
Please rate this page
(literature.php)
(0/150)

BRENDA support

Literature summary for 2.1.1.17 extracted from

  • Mueller, H.; Grande, T.; Ahlstr?m, O.; Skrede, A.
    A diet rich in phosphatidylethanolamine increases plasma homocysteine in mink: a comparison with a soybean oil diet (2005), Br. J. Nutr., 94, 684-690.
    View publication on PubMed

Organism

Organism UniProt Comment Textmining
Neogale vison
-
5-6-months old farm-bred mink. Mink fed on 67LNGB diet (67% extracted lipids from natural gas-utilising bacteria, fed for 25 d, total phosphatidylethanolamine 25.7 mg/g) have a significantly higher homocysteine plasma concentrations, plasma total phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine, lysophosphatidylcholine and phospholipids are significantly lower and the phosphatidylethanolamine:phosphatidylcholine ratio in plasma increases significantly compared to SB diet (0% extracted lipids from natural gas-utilising bacteria, but 100% soyabean oil, fed for 25 d, total phosphatidylethanolamine 0.04 mg/g). Plasma homocysteine is negatively correlated with phosphatidylcholine (r = -0.74). There is a significant negative correlation between plasma homocysteine and total phospholipids (r = -0.022). Faecal excretion of phosphatidylcholine, lysophosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine is higher in the mink fed the 67LNGB diet than in those fed the SB diet, and significantly higher in mink fed the 67LNGB diet than in animal fed the 17LNGB (17% extraceted lipids from natural gas-utilising bacteria, fed for 25 d, total phosphatidylethanolamine 2.6 mg/g) diet.
-

Source Tissue

Source Tissue Comment Organism Textmining
blood plasma
-
Neogale vison
-
feces
-
Neogale vison
-