Unbound free fatty acid profiles in human plasma and the unexpected absence of unbound palmitoleate.

Pubmed ID: 28082409

Pubmed Central ID: PMC5335587

Journal: Journal of lipid research

Publication Date: March 1, 2017

Affiliation: Membrane Sciences, San Diego, CA 92121 akleinfeld@membranesci.com.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified, Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins, Lipid Metabolism, 2-Naphthylamine, Fluorescence, Healthy Volunteers, Myristic Acid

Authors: Huber AH, Kleinfeld AM

Cite As: Huber AH, Kleinfeld AM. Unbound free fatty acid profiles in human plasma and the unexpected absence of unbound palmitoleate. J Lipid Res 2017 Mar;58(3):578-585. Epub 2017 Jan 12.

Studies:

Abstract

We determined for the first time the profiles of the nine most abundant unbound FFAs (FFAus) in human plasma. Profiles were determined for a standard reference plasma of pooled healthy adults for which the Lipid MAPSMAPS Consortium had determined the total FFA profiles. Measurements were performed by using 20 different acrylodan-labeled fatty acid binding protein mutants (probes), which have complementary specificities for the nine FFAs that comprise more than 96% of long-chain plasma FFA. The acrylodan fluorescence emission for each probe changes upon binding a FFAu. The plasma concentrations of each of the nine FFAus were determined by combining the measured fluorescence ratios of the 20 probes. The total molar FFAu concentration accounted for &lt;10<sup>-5</sup> of the total FFA concentration, and the mole fractions of the FFAu profiles were substantially different than the total FFA profiles. Myristic acid, for example, comprises 22% of the unbound versus 2.8% of the total. The most surprising difference is our finding of zero unbound <i>cis</i>-9-palmitoleic acid (POA), whereas the total POA was 7.2%. An unidentified plasma component appears to specifically prevent the release of POA. FFAus are the physiologically active FFAs, and plasma FFAu profiles may provide novel information about human health.