Dietary intervention with ω-3 marine fatty acids may potentially modulate inflammation and oxidative stress markers related with CVD, metabolic syndrome and cancer. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether different proportions of ω-3 EPA and DHA intake provoke a modulation of the production of lipid mediators and then, an influence on different indexes of inflammation and oxidative stress in a controlled dietary animal experiment using Wistar rats. For such scope, a lipidomic SPE-LC-ESI-MS/MS approach previously developed was applied to determine lipid mediators profile in plasma samples. The effect of ω-3 fatty acids associated to different ratios EPA:DHA was compared with the effect exerted by ω-3 ALA supplementation from linseed oil and ω-6 LA from soybean oil. CRP showed a tendency to greater inflammatory status in all ω-3-fed animals. Interestingly, ratios 1:1 and 2:1 EPA:DHA evidenced a noteworthy healthy effect generating a less oxidative environment and modulating LOX and COX activities toward a decrease in the production of proinflammatory ARA eicosanoids and oxidative stress biomarkers from EPA and DHA. In addition, the ability of 1:1 and 2:1 fish oil diets to reduce lipid mediator levels was in concurrence with the protective effect exerted by decreasing inflammatory markers as ω-6/ω-3 ratio in plasma and membranes. It was also highlighted the effect of a higher DHA amount in the diet reducing the healthy benefits described in terms of inflammation and oxidative stress. Results support the antiinflammatory and antioxidative role of fish oils and, particularly, the effect of adequate proportions EPA:DHA.
The present work describes the development of a robust and sensitive targeted analysis platform for the simultaneous quantification in blood plasma of lipid oxygenated mediators and fatty acids using solid-phase extraction (SPE) and high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS). The concurrent analysis of these lipid mediators is challenging because of their instability, differences in solubility, and the frequent occurrence of isobaric forms with similar fragmentation patterns. Results demonstrated that the reduction of SPE temperature to 4 °C is a critical parameter for preserving the hydroperoxy derivatives. Polymeric HLB cartridges increased 40-50 % ARA, EPA, and DHA sensitivity compared to C18 sorbent and also provided higher global performance for most hydroxides and other oxidation products. The proposed method for the two tested mass analyzers yields high sensitivity, good linearity, and reproducibility, with detection limits ranging 0.002-7 ng/mL and global recoveries as high as 85-112 %. However, the additional advantage of the linear ion trap (LIT) mass analyzer working in full scan product ion mode, compared to the triple quadrupole (QqQ) operating in multiple reaction monitoring (MRM), should be noted: the full scan product ion mode provides the full fragmentation spectra of compounds that allowed the discrimination of coeluting isomers and false positive identifications without additional chromatography development. The proposed lipidomic procedure demonstrates a confident, simple, and sensitive method to profile in plasma a wide range of lipid eicosanoid and docosanoid mediators, including innovatively the analysis of hydroperoxy congeners and nonoxidized PUFA precursors.
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