2 research outputs found
Detailed dimethylacetal and fatty acid composition of rumen content from lambs fed lucerne or concentrate supplemented with soybean oil
Articles in International JournalsLipid metabolism in the rumen is responsible for the complex fatty acid profile of rumen outflow compared with the dietary
fatty acid composition, contributing to the lipid profile of ruminant products. A method for the detailed dimethylacetal and
fatty acid analysis of rumen contents was developed and applied to rumen content collected from lambs fed lucerne or
concentrate based diets supplemented with soybean oil. The methodological approach developed consisted on a basic/
acid direct transesterification followed by thin-layer chromatography to isolate fatty acid methyl esters from dimethylacetal,
oxo- fatty acid and fatty acid dimethylesters. The dimethylacetal composition was quite similar to the fatty acid
composition, presenting even-, odd- and branched-chain structures. Total and individual odd- and branched-chain
dimethylacetals were mostly affected by basal diet. The presence of 18:1 dimethylacetals indicates that biohydrogenation
intermediates might be incorporated in structural microbial lipids. Moreover, medium-chain fatty acid dimethylesters were
identified for the first time in the rumen content despite their concentration being relatively low. The fatty acids containing
18 carbon-chain lengths comprise the majority of the fatty acids present in the rumen content, most of them being
biohydrogenation intermediates of 18:2n26 and 18:3n23. Additionally, three oxo- fatty acids were identified in rumen
samples, and 16-O-18:0 might be produced during biohydrogenation of the 18:3n23