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on August 28, 2008

Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2008
Published online before print August 28, 2008, doi: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.107.156992
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Submitted on March 27, 2007
Accepted on August 19, 2008

Anticoagulant Effect of Dietary Fish Oil in Hyperlipidemia. A Study of Hepatic Gene Expression in APOE2 Knock-in Mice

Kristof Vanschoonbeek ; Kristiaan Wouters ; Paola E.J. van der Meijden ; Patrick J. van Gorp ; Marion A.H. Feijge ; Marjolein Herfs ; Leon J. Schurgers ; Marten H. Hofker ; Moniek P.M. de Maat ; and Johan W.M. Heemskerk *

From the Departments of Biochemistry (K.V., P.E.J.v.M., M.A.H.F., L.J.S., J.W.M.H.), Human Biology (K.V.), and Molecular Genetics (K.W., P.J.v.G., M.H.H.), CARIM and NUTRIM, and VitaK (M.H., L.J.S.), Maastricht University, The Netherlands; the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (M.H.H.), University Medical Center Groningen, The Netherlands; and the Department of Hematology (M.d.M.), Erasmus Medical Centre Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jwm.heemskerk{at}bioch.unimaas.nl.

Objective—In hyperlipidemia, dietary fish oil containing n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) provokes plasma triacylglycerol lowering and hypocoagulant activity. Using APOE2 knock-in mice, the relation of these fish-oil effects with altered gene expression was investigated.

Methods and Results—Male APOE2 knock-in mice, fed regular low-fat diet, had elevated plasma levels of triacylglycerol and coagulation factors. Plasma lipids and (anti)coagulant factors reduced on feeding the mice with fish oil (n-3 PUFA) or, to a lesser degree, with sunflowerseed oil (n-6 PUFA). The fish-oil diet provoked a 40% reduction in thrombin generation. Microarray (Affymetrix) and single-gene expression analysis of mouse livers showed that fish oil induced: (1) upregulation of genes contributing to lipid degradation and oxidation; (2) downregulation of genes of {gamma}-glutamyl carboxylase and of transcription factors implicated in lipid synthesis; (3) unchanged expression of coagulation factor genes. After fish-oil diet, vitamin K–dependent coagulation factors accumulated in periportal areas of the liver; prothrombin was partly retained in uncarboxylated form. Only part of the changes in gene expression were different from the effects of sunflowerseed oil diet.

Conclusions—The hypocoagulant effect of n-3 PUFA is not caused by reduced hepatic synthesis of coagulation factors, but rather results from retention of uncarboxylated coagulation factors. In contrast, the lipid-lowering effect of n-3 PUFA links to altered expression of genes that regulate transcription and fatty acid metabolism.


Key words: APOE2 mice • coagulation • fish oil • gene expression profiles • thrombin