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ARTICLE V
December 1998, Volume 4 No. 1&2
Mal J Nutr 4:73-80, 1998.
http://nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn004/mjn4n12_005.pdf
The
role of unsaponifiable components in the lipidemic property of olive
oil.
Khor HT, Rajendra R and Gopalakrishnan M.
Department of Biochemistry,
Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
ABSTRACT
(Full Article)
Pure olive oil triglycerides (POLO), free from all unsaponifiable matter,
were isolated from Virgin Spanish olive oil (COLO) by alumina-charcoal
column chromatography. COLO and POLO were used as sources of dietary
fat in two animal studies. The responses of serum and liver lipids to
the two types of dietary fat were examined. Our results show that animals
fed POLO-diet gave somewhat higher serum total and LDL cholesterol levels
as compared to those on COLO-diet. The increase in serum cholesterol
level is followed by a parallel increase in liver cholesterol content.
These results indicate that the hypocholesterolemic effect of olive
oil was partly due to the presence of the unsaponifiable matter. Supplement
of the POLO-diet separately with a-tocopherol
and squalene resulted in serum lipid responses similar to that observed
with the COLO-diet. The serum and liver triglyceride levels are not
affected by the removal of unsaponifiable components but addition of
a--T
and squalene to the POLO-diet appeared to lower both the cholesterol
and triglyceride levels in the serum but increased only the liver cholesterol
content. These results show that the unsaponifiable components modulate
the hypocholesterolemic effect of olive oil.
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