Metabolism of dietary cetoleic acid (22 : 1n-11) in mink (Mustela vison) and gray seals (Halichoerus grypus) studied using radiolabeled fatty acids
Date
2006-07
Authors
Cooper, Margaret H.
Iverson, Sara J.
Rouvinen-Watt, Kirsti
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Abstract
Cetoleic acid (22:1n-11) is a good indicator of diet in marine predators and has proven to be an
important fatty acid (FA) when using adipose tissue FA composition to study diet in marine mammals
and seabirds. Feeding studies have shown that 22:1 isomers are predictably underrepresented in
adipose tissue relative to diet, implying that metabolism within the predator strongly influences
the relationship between the level of these FAs in diet and adipose tissue. Fully understanding such
metabolic processes for individual FAs is important for the quantitative estimation of predator
diets. We employed a dual-label radioisotope tracer technique to investigate the potential
modification of 22:1n-11 and its recovery in the blubber of gray seals (Halichoerus grypus) and in
the adipose tissue and liver of mink (Mustela vison), a smaller model carnivore also accustomed to
fish-based diets. In both seals and mink, H-3 radioactivity was found in the chain-shortened
products of 22:1n-11, with 18:1 being the dominant product. We also found H-3 radioactivity in
saturated FAs. The distribution patterns of H-3 radioactivity across the FAs isolated from seal
blubber and mink subcutaneous adipose tissue were comparable, indicating that mink are a good model
for the investigation of lipid metabolism in marine carnivores.
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Citation
Cooper, Margaret H., Sara J. Iverson, and Kirsti Rouvinen-Watt. 2006. "Metabolism of dietary cetoleic acid (22 : 1n-11) in mink (Mustela vison) and gray seals
(Halichoerus grypus) studied using radiolabeled fatty acids." Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 79(4): 820-829. Copyright © 2006 The University of Chicago Press.