Summary: | Abstract: This study investigated the effects of a diet deficient in α-linolenic acid followed or not by supplementation with phospholipids rich in n–3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) on behavior and phospholipid fatty acid composition in selected brain regions. Three weeks before mating, two groups of mice were fed a semisynthetic diet containing both linoleic and α-linolenic acid or a diet deficient in α-linolenic acid. Pups were fed the same diet as their dams. At the age of 7 weeks, a part of the deficient group was supplemented with n–3 PUFA from either egg yolk or pig brain phospholipids for 2 months. In the open field, rearing activity was significantly reduced in the deficient group. In the elevated plus maze (anxiety protocol), the time spent on open arms was significantly smaller in deficient mice than in controls. Using the learning protocol with the same task, the α-linolenic acid deficiency induced a learning deficit. Rearing activity and learning deficits were completely restored by supplementation with egg yolk or cerebral phospholipids, though the level of anxiety remained significantly higher than that of controls. There were no differences among the 4 diet groups for either the Morris water maze or passive avoidance. In control mice, the level of 22:6 n–3 was significantly higher in the frontal cortex compared to all other regions analysed. The frontal cortex and the striatum were the most markedly affected by the deficiency. Supplementation with phospholipids restored normal fatty acid composition in brain regions except for frontal cortex. Egg yolk or cerebral phospholipids are an effective source of n–3 PUFA for reversing behavioral changes and altered fatty acid composition induced by a diet deficient in n–3 PUFA. —Carrié, I., M. Clément, D. de Javel, H. Francès, and J-M. Bourre. Phospholipid supplementation reverses behavioral and biochemical alterations induced by n–3 polyunsaturated fatty acid deficiency in mice. J. Lipid Res. 2000. 41: 473–480.
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