The basics
Fats and lipids
Mostly Lipids
Monogastric
Ruminants
100

Why are lipids an important energy source?

contain more C, H in relation to O, so that it has 2.25x more energy compared to carbs and protein

It has important biochemical, physiological functions in animals

100

Lipids in plant vs animal tissues?

Plant = lipid content of most plants is relatively low except oilseeds - canola, soybean, sunflower, safflower

Animal = relatively large amounts in animal tissues - adipose tissue, major form of energy & amount is variable based on diet, age, physiological state

100

Types of lipids are?

Triacyglycerol - cereal grains, oilseeds, animal fats

Glycolipids - Forages

phospholipids - high in ruminal bacteria

100

Where does lipid digestion occur?

Primarly in small intestine 

lingual lipase and gastric lipase play minor roles - stomach initiates emulsification

100

Products of lipid digestion in the rumen are?

Complete degradation of triglycerides in the rumen to get Glycerol and FFA

200

Lipid Classification?

Simple lipids - fatty acids, triacylglycerol's, waxes = sterol esters and non-sterol esters

Compound lipids - phospholipids, glycolipids, lipproteins

200

Major funtions of fatty acids/lipids in the body

Long term energy reserve

insulation

structural component of cell membranes

component of enzyme systems

component of steroid hormones

fat-soluble vitamin absorption 

200

The fatty acids that constitute lipids are?

Short chain fatty acids - up to 8 carbons

medium chain fatty acids - 10-16 carbons

long chain fatty acids - >18 carbons

200

Phases of lipid digestion in the SI are?

Emulsification - TG hydrophobic, but enzymes are hydrophilic, emulsification reduces TG from large fat globules to tiny droplets, much bigger surface area for enzyme activity

Hydrolysis

Micelle formation

Absorption

200

What is biohydrogenation?

Requires a free -COOH group

Reduces methane due to using up hydrogen ions

Turns unsaturated fatty acids into saturated fatty acids

300

The essential fatty acids are?

Linoleic acids and linolenic acid

300

Differences of fats and oils

Esters of fatty acids and glycerol

fats = solid at room temp

oils = liquid at room temp

300

What effects the digestibility of fats and oils

Most fats, oils, are highly digestible

Digestibility is affected by degree of saturation - unsaturated FA is more digestible

Increasing chain length increases FA digestibility

300

Structure of micelles?

Bile salts for edge of micelle

NEFA, monoglycerides, cholesterol, lysophospholipids exist in bilayer inside micelle

Micelles interact with microvilli at apical membrane to release contents

Bile salts reabsorbed in ileum for reuse

300

Key biohydrogenation intermediates?

Trans-10 C18:1 & Trans-10, Cis 12 CLA

400

Symptoms of essential fatty acid deficiency

Retarded growth, kidney lesion, dermatitis of back and feet, necrosis of tail, reproductive failure, early death

400

Functions of phospholipids are?

components of cell membranes - bilayer

lipid transport as part of lipoproteins

400

Why are lipids added to diets?

Provide energy, increase palatability, provide fat-soluble vitamins, provide essential fatty acids, alleviate heat stress, dust control, lubrication, improve diet handling, improve absorption of fat-soluble vitamins, structural components of cell membranes, component of steroid hormones

400

Mechanisms of absorption include?

Mechanisms not clearly understood

passive diffusion

fatty acid transport protein

energy independent

400

How much additional lipid can be fed?

Normal ruminant diets contain 2-4% fat

Total fat in diet should be 6-7% maximum

Excessive lipids disrupt ruminal fermentation

500

Omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acid properties?

limited or denovo sunthesis 

wide variety of physiological functions - brain development, anti-carcinogennic, anti-atherosclerosis

500

Glycolipids are?

Contain CH2O, FA, N base

structural role in cells

cerebrosides, gangliosides found predominantly in the brain and medullary sheaths of nerve tissue

Grasses rich in glycolipids

500

Dietary lipid aspects?

Normal lipid content of diet from common feed ingredients is 2-4%

Supplemental lipid added to increase caloric density

Dietary lipid mostly TG

500

Transport of dietary fat is done by?

Chylomicrons transport TG to adipose tissue - stored as fat

Lipoprotein lipaae expressed in adipose tissue hydrolyzes TG to NEFA and glycerol

NEFA released into bloodstream and can be used by peripheral tissues for energy, fat synthesis

Glycerol used for energy, gluconeogenesis

500

Impact of too much added fat is?

Impaired rumen function - reduced fiber digestion

Reduced production of VFA

Reduced DMI, milk yield

Milk fat depression