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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Fetal lipoproteins and placental release of esterified lipids

JP Stammers, TJ Stephenson, JA Colley and D Hull

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 8(3) 457 - 463
Published: 1996

Abstract

An in vitro incubation technique was used to examine the release of lipids from the rabbit placenta. Free fatty acid, but not phospholipid or triacylglycerol, was released into the incubation media. In a second series of experiments, the addition of lipids to the umbilical circulation was studied in situ in the placenta of anaesthetized rabbits at late gestation. Each placenta was perfused from the fetal side in turn with two different perfusate solutions, either 4% bovine albumin solution or rabbit plasma. The rabbit plasma contained the appropriate carriers (lipoproteins) for esterified lipids, whereas the 4% albumin solution did not. The effluent perfusates were remarkably similar in free fatty acid concentration and composition, which closely matched the maternal free fatty acid profiles. The concentrations and fatty acid composition of the perfusate triacylglycerol and phospholipid fractions were unchanged by passage through the placenta, whether perfused with 4% albumin or with rabbit plasma. With this system, no evidence could be found for the addition of esterified lipids to the umbilical circulation in the rabbit despite the provision of appropriate carriers on the fetal side of the placenta.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9960457

© CSIRO 1996

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