Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.

Effects of vitamin E-deficiency, dietary fat (corn oil versus lard), and incubation on ultrastructure of platelets, red and white cells, and on selected biochemical parameters of platelets and plasma were studied. Platelets from vitamin E-deficient rats had no obvious morphological defects, but reti...

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Main Authors: J Lehmann, M McGill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1982-02-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381608
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spelling doaj-0ae65dbe9e1b43d493296a358e00dbf72021-04-24T05:51:02ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751982-02-01232299306Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.J LehmannM McGillEffects of vitamin E-deficiency, dietary fat (corn oil versus lard), and incubation on ultrastructure of platelets, red and white cells, and on selected biochemical parameters of platelets and plasma were studied. Platelets from vitamin E-deficient rats had no obvious morphological defects, but reticulocytes and lymphocytes had swollen and deformed mitochondria. Fatty acid and glycogen levels of platelets were not affected by the deficiency but total lipid levels in plasma were decreased of increased depending upon the type and level of dietary fat. In comparison with supplemented controls, the proportion of stearate increased in the phospholipid fraction of plasma from vitamin E-deficient, lard-fed but not corn oil-fed rats. In platelets, total fatty acids per mg protein were 8-12% lower with lard than with corn oil as fat source. Oleate and linoleate were higher and lower, respectively, although not to the same degree, and arachidonate was not affected. With incubation of platelet-rich plasma at 37 degrees C for 6 hr, there were no obvious morphological changes in platelets from control or from deficient, lard-fed rats, but platelets from deficient, corn oil-fed rats contained mitochondria that were swollen and deformed. Incubation did not affect fatty acid, glycogen, or tocopherol levels of platelets or tocopherol levels of plasma, regardless of type or amount of dietary fat.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381608
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J Lehmann
M McGill
spellingShingle J Lehmann
M McGill
Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet J Lehmann
M McGill
author_sort J Lehmann
title Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
title_short Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
title_full Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
title_fullStr Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin E-deficient diets.
title_sort biochemical and ultrastructural alterations in platelets, reticulocytes, and lymphocytes from rats fed vitamin e-deficient diets.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1982-02-01
description Effects of vitamin E-deficiency, dietary fat (corn oil versus lard), and incubation on ultrastructure of platelets, red and white cells, and on selected biochemical parameters of platelets and plasma were studied. Platelets from vitamin E-deficient rats had no obvious morphological defects, but reticulocytes and lymphocytes had swollen and deformed mitochondria. Fatty acid and glycogen levels of platelets were not affected by the deficiency but total lipid levels in plasma were decreased of increased depending upon the type and level of dietary fat. In comparison with supplemented controls, the proportion of stearate increased in the phospholipid fraction of plasma from vitamin E-deficient, lard-fed but not corn oil-fed rats. In platelets, total fatty acids per mg protein were 8-12% lower with lard than with corn oil as fat source. Oleate and linoleate were higher and lower, respectively, although not to the same degree, and arachidonate was not affected. With incubation of platelet-rich plasma at 37 degrees C for 6 hr, there were no obvious morphological changes in platelets from control or from deficient, lard-fed rats, but platelets from deficient, corn oil-fed rats contained mitochondria that were swollen and deformed. Incubation did not affect fatty acid, glycogen, or tocopherol levels of platelets or tocopherol levels of plasma, regardless of type or amount of dietary fat.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381608
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