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© 2004 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences J. Nutr. 134:1724-1728, July 2004


Human Nutrition and Metabolism

Fish Consumption Shifts Lipoprotein Subfractions to a Less Atherogenic Pattern in Humans1

Zhengling Li, Stefania Lamon-Fava, James Otvos*, Alice H. Lichtenstein, Wanda Velez-Carrasco, Judith R. McNamara, Jose M. Ordovas and Ernst J. Schaefer2

Lipid Metabolism Laboratory, Jean Mayer U.S. Department of Agriculture Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, Boston, MA and * Liposcience, Raleigh, NC

2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Ernst.Schaefer{at}tufts.edu.

The effect of fish consumption on plasma lipoprotein subfraction concentrations was studied in 22 men and women (age > 40 y). Subjects were provided an average American diet (AAD, 35% of energy as fat, 14% as saturated fat, and 35 mg cholesterol/MJ) for 6 wk before being assigned to a National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Step 2 high-fish diet (n = 11, 26% of energy as fat, 4.5% as saturated fat, and 15 mg cholesterol/MJ) or a NCEP Step 2 low-fish diet (n = 11, 26% of energy as fat, 4.0% as saturated fat, and 11 mg cholesterol/MJ) for 24 wk. All food and drink were provided to study participants. Consumption of the high-fish NCEP Step 2 diet was associated with a significant reduction in medium and small VLDL, compared with the AAD diet, whereas the low-fish diet did not affect VLDL subfractions. Both diets significantly reduced LDL cholesterol concentrations, without modifying LDL subfractions. Both diets also lowered HDL cholesterol concentrations. However, the high-fish diet significantly lowered only the HDL fraction containing both apolipoprotein (apo) AI and AII (LpAI:AII) and did not change HDL subfractions assessed by NMR, whereas the low-fish diet significantly lowered the HDL fraction containing only apo AI (LpAI) and the large NMR HDL fractions, resulting in a significant reduction in HDL particle size. Neither diet affected VLDL and LDL particle size. Our data indicate that within the context of a diet restricted in fat and cholesterol, a higher fish content favorably affects VLDL and HDL subspecies.


KEY WORDS: • lipoprotein subspecies • lipoprotein particle size • NCEP • diet • cholesterol • triglycerides




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