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1.
Chronic ethanol ingestion leads to the acquisition of a tolerance to membrane lipid disordering, a lowered partition coefficient to hydrophobic compounds and a resistance to the hydrolysis of the phospholipids by exogenous phospholipase A2. Anionic phospholipids have been implicated as being responsible for the resistance to lipid disordering and a number of modifications to these phospholipids are known to occur as a result of chronic ethanol-ingestion. In this study the basis of the resistance to phospholipase A2 in hepatic microsomes was investigated. It was found that chronic ethanol-induced modifications to each of the major phospholipid classes was responsible to some extent for the resistance to phospholipase A2, however, PS was particularly potent considering it is a compositionally minor constituent. The effect was interpreted as a reduced ability to activate the phospholipase A2 since PS acts as an essential activator of phospholipase A2 (along with PI). Fatty acid analysis revealed that the chronic ethanol-treatment resulted in a elevated level of docosahexaenoate with a parallel reduction in arachidonate in phosphatidylserine. Lipid packing and organization is important in the regulating the level of exogenous phospholipase A2 activity but the activity was not found to correlate with lipid order of different phosphatidylserine species. It is concluded that subtle differences in the molecular species arrangement or disposition around the enzyme may be responsible for the altered phospholipase A2 interaction with the membrane induced by chronic ethanol-treatment. One implication of this study is that other anionic phospholipid dependent membrane proteins, of which there are many known examples, may also be modified as a result of chronic ethanol-ingestion.  相似文献   

2.
One of the adaptive responses of cell membranes to chronic ethanol consumption is the acquisition of a resistance to fluidization or disordering of the lipids by ethanol in vitro and a reduced partitioning of ethanol into the membrane (membrane tolerance). The degree to which the effects on partitioning and lipid disordering share common features has not previously been explored and in addition the relevance of the value of lipid order in the absence of added ethanol (baseline lipid order) to membrane tolerance has not been established. The location in the bilayer and the nature of the modification underlying these effects is also unknown. The effect of chronic ethanol treatment was examined using 5-doxyl decane as a model hydrophobic compound. Its partitioning into the membranes was determined by utilizing its ability to quench fluorophores (1,6-diphenyl-2,3,5-hexatriene and 3- and 12-anthroyl stearates) by collisional quenching. The partition coefficient of 5-doxyl decane into the bilayer central region was reduced as a result of the chronic ethanol treatment. The effect could also be demonstrated in vesicles of phospholipids and was lost 4 days after withdrawal of the ethanol from the diet. These results closely parallel those relating to resistance to lipid disordering and suggest that both techniques detect a common modification. Lipid order was assessed using fluorescence anisotropy measurements of a range of fluorophores, including those used to determine the partitioning properties of the membrane. No effect of chronic ethanol treatment on lipid order was found, either in the intact membranes or in vesicles of extracted phospholipids. This suggests that changes in baseline order are not critical features of membrane tolerance in liver microsomes. In addition it appears that the altered partitioning of the 5-doxyl decane into the central region of the membrane is not related to lipid order changes in this region. The reduced partitioning of 5-doxyl decane may be a reflection of a redistribution in the lipid bilayer, perhaps due to modifications in other locations in the membrane, such as the lipid head group region.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of chronic ethanol ingestion on NADPH-oxidase and on the NADPH-catalyzed peroxidation of lipids in rat liver microsomes have been studied. It was demonstrated that the rates of NADPH oxidation, of oxygen consumption, and of malondialdehyde formation increased significantly above control values after one month of ethanol ingestion. Further, the fatty acid composition of these microsomes revealed a decrease in arachidonate and in the C22 polyenes. Also, the energies of activation for the formation of malondialdehyde increased in the microsomes from the ethanol-treated animals. These results were interpreted to mean that ethanol ingestion had induced changes in the microsomal membranes such that additional or alternate, possibly abnormal, pathways for lipid peroxidation were functional. Finally, these data suggest a mechanism whereby chronic ethanol ingestion inhances the production of lipid peroxides via the microsomal-catalyzed oxidation of NADPH.  相似文献   

4.
We have analyzed the effects of ethanol in vitro on the remodeling of neutral lipids and phospholipids in mitochondria and microsomes isolated from chick brain. We used three different fatty acyl-CoAs of similar chain lengths but different degrees of unsaturation. Our results demonstrate the existence of active mechanisms for acyl-CoA transfer into neutral lipids and phospholipids in both mitochondria and microsomes. The profile of fatty acid incorporation was clearly different according to the membrane and lipid fraction in question. Thus, in mitochondrial lipids, the remodeling processes showed a clear preference for the saturated fatty acid whilst the polyunsaturated one was the preferred substrate for microsomal lipid acylation. With regard to the effects of ethanol in vitro, we were able to demonstrate that exposure of the membrane to ethanol led to an increase in the incorporation of polyunsaturated fatty acid into triacylglycerol (TG) in both mitochondria and microsomes, indicating that it directly stimulates the acylation of diacylglycerol (DG) to give TG. This effect may then contribute to the widely reported stimulation of TG biosynthesis in cases of both acute and chronic ethanol ingestion. It is noteworthy that the exposure of microsomes to ethanol in vitro also stimulated the incorporation of oleoyl-CoA into the aminophospholipids phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine (PS). We also demonstrate that both mitochondria and microsomes synthesize fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) from fatty acyl-CoA, although there is a clear difference in preference for the fatty acid used as substrate in the esterification of the alcohol. Thus, mitochondria were capable of forming FAEEs from the polyunsaturated fatty acid whilst in microsomes the saturated fatty acid was the preferred substrate. In both types of membrane, FAEE production was lowest with the monounsaturated fatty acyl-CoA.  相似文献   

5.
Cell membranes and vesicles composed of extracted phospholipids isolated from rats chronically-fed ethanol develop a resistance to disordering by ethanol in vitro (membrane tolerance) and a decreased partitioning of ethanol into the membranes. The anionic lipid phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) is the only microsomal phospholipid from the ethanol-fed rats that confers tolerance to vesicles of microsomal phospholipids from control rats in a paradigm where phospholipid classes are sequentially swapped. To investigate the molecular basis of this adaptation, the fatty acid content of microsomal PtdIns extracted from the livers of rats chronically fed ethanol for 5 weeks and their calorically-matched controls was analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) and 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Chronic ethanol consumption caused an 8.4% decrease in arachidonic acid [20:4(n - 6)], a 20.0% increase in oleic acid [18: 1(n - 9)] and a 47.1% increase in the quantitatively minor fatty acid [20:3(n - 6)]. 1H-NMR was used to quantitatively assay compositional changes in the delta 5 olefinic moiety of the acyl chains in PtdIns, an approach that should be broadly applicable to other lipid systems. After chronic ethanol feeding PtdIns had decreased delta 5 unsaturates (-7.9% NMR, -8.2% GLC) and a corresponding increase in delta 5 saturates (+5.4% NMR, +5.3% GLC). In the other phospholipids, chronic ethanol feeding caused alterations in the fatty acid compositions specific for each phospholipid. PtdIns was the only microsomal phospholipid that exhibited a significant decrease in both the polyunsaturate pool and the ratio of the total olefinic content to the saturated fatty acid content. The major adaptive response in rat liver microsomal PtdIns to chronic ethanol administration involves a decrease in arachidonic acid [20:4 (n - 6)], which is partly compensated for by increases in oleic acid [18:1(n - 9)] and eicosatrienoic acid [20:3 (n - 6)], resulting in a depressed unsaturation and polyunsaturation index. The decreased unsaturation at the delta 5 position may have special functional relevance, due to the proximity of this position to the membrane surface, where ethanol is believed to reside. Whether these acyl changes are merely coincident with, or causative of, membrane tolerance requires further elucidation.  相似文献   

6.
It is known that aging is characterized by changes in cell metabolism resulting in modification of the structure and function of cell membrane components which is mainly the consequence of reactive oxygen species action. These disturbances are also enhanced by different xenobiotics, e.g. ethanol. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to examine green tea influence on total antioxidant status (TAS) and on composition and electric charge of erythrocyte membrane phospholipids in ethanol intoxicated rats of various ages. Antioxidant abilities of erythrocytes were estimated by measuring TAS. Qualitative and quantitative composition of phospholipids in the membrane was determined by HPLC, while the extent of erythrocytes lipid peroxidation was estimated by HPLC measurement of malondialdehyde (MDA) and 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) levels. Electrophoresis was used to determine the surface charge density of the rat erythrocyte membrane. It was shown that the process of aging was accompanied by a decrease in TAS and in the total amount of phospholipids as well as by enhancement of lipid peroxidation and increase in surface charge density of erythrocyte membrane. Ethanol administration caused, in term, decrease in TAS and increase in the level of all phospholipids and lipid peroxidation products. Ethanol as well significantly enhanced changes in surface charge density of erythrocyte membrane. The ingestion of green tea partially prevented decrease in erythrocyte antioxidant abilities observed during aging and ethanol intoxication. Moreover, long-term drinking of green tea protects the structure of the erythrocytes membrane disturbed during aging process and/or chronic ethanol intoxication.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of 60 hr ethanol ingestion on lipid composition of liver and brain membranes from 2-day-old chicks was investigated. Analysis of hepatic membrane cholesterol shows that ethanol induced a slight increase in microsomes exclusively due to free cholesterol while mitochondria was not affected. In brain, both fractions showed a clear increase in their cholesterol content, while a high decrease was observed in myelin. Free cholesterol was also the main responsible for the changes found in brain. The ethanol-treated animals showed an alteration in their phospholipid composition exclusively in brain microsomes and myelin. Despite all these changes, the values of cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio in both liver and brain membranes remained unaltered after short ethanol treatment. Our results indicate that neonatal chick brain membranes appears to be especially sensitive to the presence of ethanol.  相似文献   

8.
Membrane effects of ethanol: bulk lipid versus lipid domains   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
It has been well-established that ethanol fluidizes the bulk lipid of membranes and that this effect may alter cell function and be involved in ethanol sensitivity and tolerance. This hypothesis has been supported in several studies, however, there is also a considerable amount of data that do not support such an explanation, e.g., direct effect of ethanol on proteins, other membrane acting drugs, temperature effects, effects of ethanol on aged membranes and inconsistent effects of chronic ethanol consumption on lipid content. This review examined the bulk membrane fluidization hypothesis in light of those data and proposed a modification of the bulk membrane hypothesis that is based on recent data that show that ethanol and other alcohols have a specific effect on the structural properties of different membrane domains. This specific effect of ethanol is discussed within the context of how changes in fluidity of domains may alter membrane function.  相似文献   

9.
Phospholipids extracted from liver microsomes and mitochondria of ethanol-fed rats retained the resistance to membrane disordered by ethanol which is observed in the intact isolated membranes. The lipid extracts were separated into the major phospholipid classes (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylinositol from microsomes and phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and cardiolipin from mitochondria) by preparative TLC. The extent of membrane disordering by ethanol of phospholipid vesicles composed of a mixture of phospholipids from ethanol-fed rats and controls was determined from the reduction of the order parameter of the spin-probe 12-doxyl-stearate. In contrast to previous reports, we found that all phospholipid classes from ethanol-fed rats confer resistance to disordering by ethanol. To a first approximation the extent of resistance was proportional to the fraction of lipids from ethanol-fed rats, regardless of the phospholipid head-group. Subtle differences between phospholipid classes may exist but were too small to measure accurately. Except for phosphatidylethanol, incorporation of anionic phospholipids did not have a significant effect on the sensitivity of phospholipid vesicles to the disordering effect of ethanol. Vesicles prepared from mixtures of various dioleoyl phospholipids and natural phospholipids did not indicate a clear effect of fatty acid saturation on the sensitivity to disordering by ethanol. Although the precise molecular changes that occur in phospholipids from ethanol-fed rats have not been fully characterized it appears that subtle changes in all phospholipid classes contribute to the resistance to ethanol disordering of these membranes.  相似文献   

10.
In synaptosomal fractions of rat brain the activities of phospholipase A2 and the phospholipid base-exchange enzymes are highly dependent on external Ca2+ concentrations. Their activity is inhibited by the presence of 50 mM ethanol in vitro. Administration of ethanol to rats by inhalation causes a progressive increase in the activity of these enzymes in synaptosomal preparations at all Ca2+ concentrations studied. The increased activity of these enzymes persists in preparations from rats undergoing a physical syndrome of withdrawal from ethanol. The addition of ethanol in vitro to preparations from animals that had received ethanol in vivo had no significant effect on enzyme activity. The results are discussed in relation to the possible roles of membrane lipid metabolism and synaptic Ca2+ sensitivity in ethanol tolerance and physical dependence.  相似文献   

11.
Rat-liver microsomes were treated with two non-ionic detergents, Triton X-100 and Lubrol WX, with phospholipase A2, or with aqueous acetone solution. The activity of the membrane-bound UDP-glucoronosyltransferase (UDPGT, EC 2.4.1.17) was measured after the treatment with these perturbants. At the same time, modifications of the secondary structure of the microsomal proteins were followed and studied by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The detergents greatly activated UDPGT, maximally at a 1 mM concentration of either detergent. The maximally activating Triton X-100 treatment did not greatly change the ellipticity of the microsomes at 222 nm ((theta)222), whereas that with Lubrol WX affected the secondary structure of the membrane proteins more strongly. UDPGT activation also occurred in phospholipase A2-treated microsomes. Maximal activation was obtained after 1--5 min of incubation and was stable throughout the experiment. Phospholipase A2 at the ratio of microsomal protein to phospholipase 250 : 1 (w/w) slightly increased (theta)222 after 10 min of incubation and did not change it further even after 30 min of incubation. Treatment of liver microsomes with a 10 : 90 (v/v) aqueous acetone solution removed 90% of the total membrane phospholipids, particularly phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. The UDPGT activity was decreased in lipid-depleted microsomes, and the enzyme was not reactivated when phosphatidylcholine-lysophosphatidylcholine liposomes were added at a low temperature. An even greater decrease was obtained when the lipid binding was carried out at 37 degree C. Lipid-depleted microsomes had a high (theta)222 associated with a red-shift of 2 nm, indicating partial aggregation of membrane proteins and an increase in the alpha-helical content of the protein after acetone extraction. However, this particular protein structure was partially reversible, since a binding of phospholipids to lipid-depleted microsomes gave a (theta)222 close to that found in control microsomes. The UDPGT activity was not dependent on the secondary structure of the membrane proteins.  相似文献   

12.
The activation of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C by ethanol was compared in hepatocytes isolated from ethanol-fed rats and from pair-fed control animals. Ethanol (100-300 mM) caused a dose-dependent transient increase in cytosolic free Ca2+ levels in indo-1-loaded hepatocytes from both groups of animals. The rate of Ca2+ increase was similar in hepatocytes from control and ethanol-fed rats, but the decay of the Ca2+ increase was somewhat slower in the latter preparation. The ethanol-induced Ca2+ increase caused activation of glycogen phosphorylase, with 50% response at 50 mM-ethanol and a maximal response at 150-200 mM-ethanol, not significantly different in hepatocytes from control and ethanol-fed animals. Ins(1,4,5)P3 formation in response to ethanol (300 mM) or vasopressin (2 nM or 40 nM) was also similar in the two preparations. It is concluded that long-term ethanol feeding does not lead to an adaptive response with respect to the ethanol-induced phospholipase C activation in rat hepatocytes. The ability of ethanol in vitro to decrease membrane molecular order in liver plasma membranes from ethanol-fed and control rats was measured by e.s.r. Membranes from ethanol-fed animals had a significantly lower baseline order parameter compared with control preparations (0.313 and 0.327 respectively), indicative of decreased membrane molecular order. Addition of 100 mM-ethanol significantly decreased the order parameter in control preparations by 2.1%, but had no effect on the order parameter of plasma membranes from ethanol-fed rats, indicating that the plasma membranes had developed tolerance to ethanol, similar to other membranes in the liver. Thus the membrane structural changes associated with this membrane tolerance do not modify the ethanol-induced activation of phospholipase C. The transient activation of phospholipase C by ethanol in hepatocytes may play a role in maintaining an adaptive phenotype in rat liver.  相似文献   

13.
T F Taraschi  A Wu  E Rubin 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7096-7101
Ethanol, in vitro, is known to perturb the molecular order of the phospholipids in biological membranes, while chronic ethanol exposure, in vivo, leads to resistance to disordering. Such changes have usually been measured by electron spin resonance, utilizing fatty acid spin probes. The use of such probes is controversial, since their orientation in the membrane may not accurately represent that of individual phospholipids. We, therefore, compared ethanol-induced structural perturbations in the membranes of rat hepatic microsomes measured with the spin probe 12-doxylstearic acid (SA 12) with those assayed with various phospholipid spin probes. With SA 12, the addition of increasing amounts of ethanol (50-250 mM) in vitro caused a progressive decrease in the membrane molecular order, as measured by electron spin resonance (ESR). By contrast, microsomes obtained from rats chronically fed ethanol were resistant to the disordering effect of ethanol. Microsomes labeled with the phospholipid spin probes 1-palmitoyl-2-(12-doxylstearoyl)phosphatidylcholine, -phosphatidylethanolamine, or -phosphatidic acid also exhibited increased disordering with the addition of increasing amounts of ethanol. However, the effect noted with phospholipid spin probes was less than that observed with the fatty acid probe. Microsomes obtained from the livers of chronically intoxicated animals labeled with the phospholipid probes were also resistant to the disordering effects of ethanol in vitro. These results suggest that fatty acid spin probes are qualitatively valid for measuring membrane perturbations in biological membranes, ethanol affects all microsomal phospholipids, regardless of chemical dissimilarities (e.g., head-group structure), in a qualitatively similar fashion, and the fluidization of fatty acyl chains in microsomal membranes is comparable in different membrane phospholipids.  相似文献   

14.
1. The effect of chronic ethanol treatment on the level of lipid peroxidation in rat liver homogenate and subcellular fractions was measured using chemiluminescence technique and malondialdehyde formation. 2. It was shown that after chronic ethanol treatment the level of Fe/ADP-ascorbate-induced lipid peroxidation was decreased in the whole and "postnuclear" liver homogenates. Dilution of the homogenates prevented depressive effect of ethanol on lipid peroxidation. 3. Chronic ethanol treatment did not affect the intensity of the Fe/ADP-ascorbate-induced process in rat liver mitochondria and microsomes. 4. Peroxidative alteration of the liver lipids in vivo was evaluated by measurement of conjugated dienes (absorbance at 233 nm). It was shown that ethanol did not increase the level of u.v. absorption of lipids from mitochondria and microsomes. Chronic alcohol treatment did not influence the steady-state concentration of malonic dialdehyde in the whole liver homogenate. 5. The data obtained indicate that cytosol from the ethanol treated rat liver contains a factor(s) which prevents Fe/ADP-ascorbate-dependent lipid peroxidation in biological membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: Biochemical characteristics of brain microsomal membranes were examined before and after the brightness-discrimination learning tasks in rats that were fed either safflower oil (α-linolenate-deficient) or perilla oil (α-linolenate-sufficient) diets. We detected small changes in the chain elongation system for polyunsaturated fatty acids in microsomes, whereas no significant difference was detected in the inositol trisphosphate-induced calcium release and ATP-induced calcium uptake profiles of microsomes between the two dietary groups. The calcium ion-induced aggregation rate of microsomes was determined in both groups. We found that the aggregation rate of microsomes in the safflower oil group was significantly greater than that in the perilla oil group. The difference in susceptibility of microsomal membrane phospholipids to phospholipase A2 between the groups was obvious, and the amount of released fatty acids by phospholipase A2 from the perilla oil group microsomes was nearly half of that from the safflower oil group microsomes after the learning task. Susceptibility of sialic acids on the brain microsomal membranes to exogenous sialidase was different only after the learning task in the safflower and perilla oil groups. These results suggest that the biochemical characteristics of membrane surfaces of brain microsomes are affected significantly by the learning task itself in a dietary oil-dependent manner.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of ingestion of water containing 20% ethanol for 1-2 months on lipid peroxide levels of liver, plasma, and erythrocyte was investigated in rats. Our results show that elevated plasma lipid peroxide levels and erythrocyte susceptibility to lipid peroxidation may reflect stimulated lipid peroxidation in rat liver following chronic ethanol ingestion.  相似文献   

17.
Membranes from ethanol-fed rats are resistant to the in vitro effects of ethanol on membrane structure and function. We have proposed that the resistance arises from adaptive changes in membrane composition which lower the solubility (partition coefficient) of ethanol in these membranes. The partition of ethanol (and other alcohols and anesthetics) into red blood cells protects the cells from hypotonic hemolysis. Here, we show that the protection by alcohols and anesthetics of red blood cells from ethanol-fed rats is greatly attenuated. This finding indicates that the membrane solubility of these agents is lowered in chronic alcoholism and thus explains the resistance to the acute effects of ethanol. The protection from hemolysis decreases over 2 weeks of ethanol-feeding and returns to normal values within 1 day after ethanol withdrawal. These changes are associated with a parallel increase in total and free serum cholesterol during ethanol feeding and a return to normal values within a day after withdrawal. However, we find only a slight increase in the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio of the red blood cell membranes during the development of ethanol tolerance. In rats fed a cholesterol and saturated fat diet, the increase in serum cholesterol is also associated with an attenuation of the protection from hypotonic hemolysis.  相似文献   

18.
1. The effect of chronic ethanol consumption on the level of the t-butyl hydroperoxide (Bu'OOH)-induced lipid peroxidation in rat liver homogenate and subcellular fractions was measured using chemiluminescence technique and malondialdehyde formation. 2. It was shown that under the action of ethanol the rate of lipid peroxidation was decreased in the whole and "postnuclear" liver homogenates. 3. Ethanol significantly decreased the intensity of lipid peroxidation in microsomes, but did not affect the Bu'OOH-dependent process in mitochondria. 4. The level of lipid peroxidation was reduced after incubation of the total particulate fraction (mitochondria plus microsomes) with the undialysed cytosol from ethanol-treated rat liver. Dialysis of the cytosol prevented depressive effect of ethanol treatment on lipid peroxidation. 5. Reduced glutathione (0.1-1.0 mM) was shown to decrease the rate of lipid peroxidation in rat liver microsomes, but did not affect its level in mitochondria. 6. Pyrazole injections to rats reduced and phenobarbital treatment increased the level of the Bu'OOH-dependent lipid peroxidation in liver microsomes. 7. The data obtained indicate that the Bu'OOH-dependent lipid peroxidation is not an appropriate marker of the ethanol-induced oxidative stress in rat liver cells.  相似文献   

19.
M S Liu  S Ghosh  Y Yang 《Life sciences》1983,33(20):1995-2002
The effects of endotoxin administration on the fluidity of dog liver plasma membranes and their relationship with changes in phospholipase A2 activity were studied. Endotoxin administration decreased the fluidity of liver plasma membranes and this decrease was reversible by phosphatidylcholine. The endotoxin-induced decrease in membrane fluidity could be mimicked by digesting control liver membranes with exogenous phospholipase A2. Endotoxin administration also increased the endogenous phospholipase A2 activity. Endotoxin in vitro had no phospholipase A2-like activity but it activated the hydrolytic activity of exogenous phospholipase A2. Based on these data, it is concluded that endotoxin administration decreased the fluidity of canine liver plasma membranes by acting through activation of phospholipase A2. The decrease in membrane lipid fluidity induced by endotoxin administration may play a significant role in the development of the pathophysiology of endotoxic shock at the cellular level.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of chronic ethanol ingestion on hepatic acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity was investigated to determine the relationship between alcohol intake and cholesterol ester accumulation. Rats were given nutritionally complete liquid diets supplemented with 6.3% ethanol or an isocaloric equivalent of dextrin-maltose for 5 weeks. During this period, the hepatic acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity of ethanol-fed male rats remained constant, whereas the same activity in pair-fed controls as well as chow-fed rats exhibited a 30% decrease in activity. Unlike alcohol-fed male rats, the hepatic acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity of female rats decreased by approximately 30% by the fifth week of ethanol ingestion. Despite the fact that the gender of the animals led to disparate levels of acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity in response to ethanol ingestion, similar levels of cholesteryl ester accumulation were observed. The altered levels of acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity caused no significant change in the cholesterol concentration, cholesterol/phospholipid ratio, phospholipid fatty acid composition, or the membrane fluidity of the hepatic microsomes. We conclude that the altered hepatic acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase activity of ethanol-fed female rats cannot be directly responsible for ethanol-induced accumulation of cholesteryl esters.  相似文献   

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