Do You Know Vaccenic Acid? And Is Cis or Trans Better?
While exploring the positive effects of various conjugated linoleic acids (CLA), I also found studies on the effect of CLA on the development of cancer and tumors . Results from animal experiments make therapies based on supplementing several percent of CLA appear very interesting. For example, this study of artificially induced cancer (DMBA) in rats shows the effect of adding 0% (A3), 1% (B3), and 2% CLA (C3) to the diet. The results are very interesting, approximately a 10-fold reduction in both the number and size of tumors. For such a small dietary change, this is quite a large effect. What could be causing it? The same study also reports that dietary CLA reduces the activity of certain enzymes involved in processing polyunsaturated fats (D6D, delta-6-desaturase). This reduces the conversion of linoleic acid into arachidonic acid and its concentration in membranes. But it also reduces the conversion of the plant omega-3 ALA into the long-chain omega-3s EPA and DHA. As we will...