Secretion of lipoprotein lipid and synthesis of fatty acids, cholesterol and triacylglycerol by hepatocytes of fasted-refed rats |
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Authors: | H J Kempen F Soeterik J de Lange |
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Abstract: | Synthetic rates of fatty acid, cholesterol and triacylglycerols, and contents and secretion of lipoprotein lipids, were determined in hepatocytes of rats fed ad libitum a fat-containing stock diet or of rats fasted for 48 h and then refed for 24 or 48 h with stock diet or with a glucose-rich fat-free diet. When compared with the values for the ad libitum-fed rats, fatty acid synthesis was lower in fasted rats, slightly increased in rats refed with the stock diet, but several-fold elevated after refeeding the glucose-rich fat-free diet. Cholesterol synthesis was decreased in the fasted cells, and restored to the control level upon refeeding either diet. Triacylglycerol synthesis from exogenous oleate was greatly stimulated in the cells of fasted-refed rats above the rate in cells of the ad libitum-fed rats, the increase being considerably higher after refeeding the glucose-rich fat-free diet than the stock diet. The amount of triacylglycerol secreted by the cells was also elevated by the fasting-refeeding treatment, but the difference between the two diets was much less pronounced than seen for the lipids' synthetic rates. This imbalance may underlie the huge accumulation of this lipid observed in the heptatocytes after refeeding the rats for 48 h with the glucose-rich fat-free diet. |
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