- Turnover of plasma oleic acid measured by radio-gas chromatography.
Turnover of plasma oleic acid measured by radio-gas chromatography.
Gas-liquid chromatography with radioactivity detection (Radio-GLC) was investigated as an analytical means of determining the fractional turnover rates of plasma free fatty acids. For this purpose normal dogs were infused with 1.838 muCi/min of [1-14C]oleic acid complexed with albumin and plasma samples were taken at 0 to 110 minutes. The plasma free fatty acids were isolated by a modified Dole extraction and the methyl esters, prepared by diazomethylation, were identified and quantitated by GLC and radio-GLC using radioactive methyl heptadecanoate as internal standard. The study demonstrates that physiologically feasible infusion rates and loads of radioactive acids can be found which permit accurate analyses of plasma free fatty acids by radio-GLC. During a 2-hour infusion no labeled acid other than oleic appeared in plasma indicating that the method could be used to study the turnover of a mixture of fatty acids simultaneously. These results also indicate that conventional methods of determination of radioactivity in purified extracts can be employed without concern for recycling of label among the fatty acids, at least over short periods of time. The radio-GLC technique described yields approximately 20% higher fractional turnover times for oleic acid than do standard methods.