Unless that's the only cable you can obtain that has a jacket rated to withstand flooded burial....I say this because it has been my experience, that ALL underground conduit will eventually have water in it.
Use the correct sweeps and a pull string with cable lubricant and there should be no problems getting the cable with the direct burial/flooded burial jacket through "the turns."
Agree 100%. If underground (or damp/wet enviro), flooded jacket is the way to go, else you'll watch the cable slowly deteriorate along with signal quality as moisture gets in the cable (and it will). Sometimes I've buried direct bury cable, and it was fine for years - but suddenly it quits due to rodents, shovel accidents (I've dug up my own cables!), or other damage. TonyR has another great point - use electrician pull twine with conduit lube to make pulling cable(s) easier, which reduced likelihood of damaging the cable/jacket. If installing conduit, it's easy to pull the cable through the 10 ft conduit sections at a time, glue, and drop in the ditch.. but sometimes conduit has to go together first, cables pulled later.
When I pull cable, I also like to tie a 2nd run of pull twine to the cable, & pull it along with the cable(s). That way you have a string in the conduit for future use, should you need to pull another cable later on - because it will be nearly impossible once the conduit is glued up and buried. I've had to pull additional cables after existing ones were damaged by lightning. Having a pre-pulled string/twine was a lifesaver. Otherwise, have to pull all the cables out and start over. Try to anticipate if future needs may require more cables pulled, and size conduit accordingly. It's a lot easier to use a little larger conduit in the beginning, than to have to dig another ditch, lay 2nd conduit because cannot fit more cables in a small conduit pipe. Ask me how I know... Any job worth doing, is worth doing twice