Author: Park Y, Albright KJ, Storkson JM
Date: 3/1999
Journal: Lipids
Two experiments were conducted. In Experiment 1, 8-wk-old mice were
fed control diet or diet supplemented with 0.5% conjugated linoleic
acid (CLA) to study the effect of CLA on body composition (CLA: 40.8-
41.1% c-9,t-11 isomer, 43.5-44.9% t-10,c-12 isomer). The data for CLA-
fed mice vs. controls described parallel but significantly distinct
responses for both absolute and relative changes in body fat mass
(reduced in CLA-fed mice) and for relative changes in whole body
protein and whole body water (both of which were increased in CLA-fed
mice). In the CLA-fed mice, the effect on whole body protein appeared
to precede the reduction in body fat mass. In Experiment 2, weanling
mice were fed control diet or diet supplemented with 0.5% CLA for 4
wk (test group), at which time all mice were fed control diet devoid
of added CLA. The test group exhibited significantly reduced body fat
and significantly enhanced whole body water relative to controls at
the time of diet change. Time trends for changes in relative body
composition were described by parallel lines where the test group
exhibited significantly less body fat but significantly more whole
body protein, whole body water, and whole body ash than controls.
Tissue CLA levels declined following the withdrawal of CLA from the
diet. In skeletal muscle of mice fed CLA-supplemented diet, the t-
10,c-12 isomer was cleared significantly faster than the c-9,t-11 CLA
isomer.