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      The composition of individual molecular species of plasma phosphatidylcholine in human pregnancy.

      Early Human Development
      Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Fatty Acids, Omega-3, metabolism, Fatty Acids, Unsaturated, analysis, Female, Fetal Blood, chemistry, Fetus, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Liver, embryology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Palmitates, Phosphatidylcholines, blood, Placenta, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Stearates

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          Abstract

          The molecular species composition of plasma phosphatidylcholine (PC) was measured in sequential blood samples from 13 pregnant women from 16 weeks of gestation to delivery at term. The increased total plasma PC concentration at term was due solely to increased concentrations of individual species containing palmitate (16:0) rather than stearate (18:0) at the sn-1 position. The specific increase of PC16:0/22:6 concentration in mid-gestation suggests that adaptations to maternal hepatic PC metabolism may provide a mechanism to ensure adequate supply of 22:6(n-3) to the fetus. While cord plasma PC was comparable to liver PC composition from three stillborn term infants, the compositions of these tissues differed from maternal plasma PC, which contained significantly more PC16:0/18:2 and PC18:0/18:2. These results suggest that, although fetal acquisition of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) is dependent on the maternal lipid supply, the detailed composition of fetal plasma PC may be regulated largely by intrinsic fetal mechanisms such as placental and liver PC metabolism. Similarly, the specific alterations to maternal plasma PC composition in pregnancy, which we postulate are associated with the supply of PUFA to the fetus, were substantially independent of variations in maternal dietary lipid nutrition.

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