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1.
Hepatic specificity of inhibitors of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase may be achieved by efficient first-pass liver extraction resulting in low circulating drug levels, as with lovastatin, or by lower cellular uptake in peripheral tissues, seen with pravastatin. BMY-21950 and its lactone form BMY-22089, new synthetic inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase, were compared with the major reference agent lovastatin and with the synthetic inhibitor fluindostatin in several in vitro and in vivo models of potency and tissue selectivity. The kinetic mechanism and the potency of BMY-21950 as a competitive inhibitor of isolated HMG-CoA reductase were comparable to the reference agents. The inhibitory potency (cholesterol synthesis assayed by 3H2O or [14C]acetate incorporation) of BMY-21950 in rat hepatocytes (IC50 = 21 nM) and dog liver slices (IC50 = 23 nM) equalled or exceeded the potencies of the reference agents. Hepatic cholesterol synthesis in vivo in rats was effectively inhibited by BMY-21950 and its lactone form BMY-22089 (ED50 = 0.1 mg/kg p.o.), but oral doses (20 mg/kg) that suppressed liver synthesis by 83-95% inhibited sterol synthesis by only 17-24% in the ileum. In contrast, equivalent doses of lovastatin markedly inhibited cholesterol synthesis in both organs. In tissue slices from rat ileum, cell dispersions from testes, adrenal, and spleen, and in bovine ocular lens epithelial cells, BMY-21950 inhibited sterol synthesis weakly in vitro with IC50 values 76- and 188-times higher than in hepatocytes; similar effects were seen for BMY-22089. However, the IC50 ratios (tissue/hepatocyte) for lovastatin and fluindostatin were near unity in these models. Thus, BMY-21950 and BMY-22089 are the first potent synthetic HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors that possess a very high degree of liver selectivity based upon differential inhibition sensitivities in tissues. This cellular uptake-based property of hepatic specificity of BMY-21950 and BMY-22089, also manifest in pravastatin, is biochemically distinct from the pharmacodynamic-based disposition of lovastatin, which along with fluindostatin exhibited potent inhibition in all tissues that were exposed to it.  相似文献   

2.
Since cholesterol biosynthesis is an integral part of cellular metabolism, several HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors were systematically analyzed in in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo sterol synthesis assays using [14C]acetate incorporation into digitonin precipitable sterols as a marker of cholesterol synthesis. Tissue distribution of radiolabeled CI-981 and lovastatin was also performed. In vitro, CI-981 and PD134967-15 were equipotent in liver, spleen, testis and adrenal, lovastatin was more potent in extrahepatic tissues than liver and BMY21950, pravastatin and PD135023-15 were more potent in liver than peripheral tissues. In ex vivo assays, all inhibitors except lovastatin preferentially inhibited liver sterol synthesis; however, pravastatin and BMY22089 were strikingly less potent in the liver. CI-981 inhibited sterol synthesis in vivo in the liver, spleen and adrenal while not affecting the testis, kidney, muscle and brain. Lovastatin inhibited sterol synthesis to a greater extent than CI-981 in the spleen, adrenal and kidney while pravastatin and BMY22089 primarily affected liver and kidney. The tissue distribution of radiolabeled CI-981 and lovastatin support the changes observed in tissue sterol synthesis. Thus, we conclude that a spectrum of liver selective HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors exist and that categorizing agents as liver selective is highly dependent upon method of analysis.  相似文献   

3.
Inhibitors of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase, the key enzyme that regulates cholesterol synthesis, lower serum cholesterol by increasing the activity of low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors in the liver. In rat liver slices, the dose-response curves for inhibition of [14C]acetate incorporation into cholesterol were similar for the active acid forms of lovastatin, simvastatin, and pravastatin. The calculated IC50 values were approximately 20-50 nM for all three drugs. Interest in possible extrahepatic effects of reductase inhibitors is based on recent findings that some inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase, lovastatin and simvastatin, can cause cataracts in dogs at high doses. To evaluate the effects of these drugs on cholesterol synthesis in the lens, we developed a facile, reproducible ex vivo assay using lenses from weanling rats explanted to tissue culture medium. [14C]Acetate incorporation into cholesterol was proportional to time and to the number of lenses in the incubation and was completely eliminated by high concentrations of inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase. At the same time, incorporation into free fatty acids was not inhibited. In marked contrast to the liver, the dose-response curve for pravastatin in lens was shifted two orders of magnitude to the right of the curves for lovastatin acid and simvastatin acid. The calculated IC50 values were 4.5 +/- 0.7 nM, 5.2 +/- 1.5 nM, and 469 +/- 42 nM for lovastatin acid, simvastatin acid, and pravastatin, respectively. Thus, while equally active in the liver, pravastatin was 100-fold less inhibitory in the lens compared to lovastatin and simvastatin. Similar selectivity was observed with rabbit lens. Following oral dosing, ex vivo inhibition of [14C]acetate incorporation into cholesterol in rat liver was similar for lovastatin and pravastatin, but cholesterol synthesis in lens was inhibited by lovastatin by as much as 70%. This inhibition was dose-dependent and no inhibition in lens was observed with pravastatin even at very high doses. This tissue-selective inhibition of sterol synthesis by pravastatin was likely due to the inability of pravastatin to enter the intact lens since pravastatin and lovastatin acid were equally effective inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase enzyme activity in whole lens homogenates. We conclude that pravastatin is tissue-selective with respect to lens and liver in its ability to inhibit cholesterol synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The three vastatins examined, lovastatin, simvastatin and pravastatin, are equally strong inhibitors of the sterol synthesis in human hepatocytes in culture with IC50-values of 4.1, 8.0 and 2.0 nM, respectively. However, in the human extrahepatic cells: umbilical vascular endothelial cells, retinal pigment epithelial cells, cornea fibroblasts and granulosa cells, pravastatin was much less inhibiting the sterol synthesis than lovastatin or simvastatin. It was observed as well that longer incubation with the vastatins resulted in higher IC50-values. In order to show that the feedback regulation mechanism for 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase was involved in this phenomena mRNA levels were measured in human vascular endothelial cells after incubation with the vastatins for 3.5 h and for 20 h. Indeed, lovastatin and simvastatin gave rise to higher levels of HMG-CoA reductase mRNA after 20 h than after 3.5 h of incubation. The differences observed in different human cell types can be explained by supposing that pravastatin is transported into the human hepatocyte via a liver-specific transporter. This was supported by the results of uptake experiments with 14C-labelled pravastatin and 14C-labelled simvastatin into human hepatocytes compared to that into human umbilical endothelial cells (as an example of an extrahepatic cell type). [14C]-Simvastatin was associated with both cell types, whereas [14C]-pravastatin was hardly associated with human endothelial cells, but to a similar extent as [14C]-simvastatin with human hepatocytes.  相似文献   

5.
In experimental animals and humans, the concentration of serum mevalonate (MVA), a direct product of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase, is considered to reflect the activity of whole-body sterol synthesis. The relationship between the concentration of serum MVA and the activity of sterol synthesis in tissues, however, has not been fully clarified. In the present study, we examined MVA metabolism by using pravastatin, a liver-selective inhibitor of HMG-CoA reductase, and common marmosets, a good model animal for studying lipid metabolism. In the time course study, the maximal reduction in the concentration of serum MVA was observed 2 h after a single oral administration of 30 mg/kg pravastatin to common marmosets. We, therefore, examined the relationship between the concentrations of serum and hepatic MVA, and sterol synthesis in some tissues at this time point. Sterol synthesis was determined ex vivo in tissue slices by measuring the incorporation of [14C]acetate into digitonin-precipitable [14C]sterols. Pravastatin at 0.03-30 mg/kg reduced dose-dependently the activity of hepatic sterol synthesis, whereas no significant reduction of sterol synthesis was observed in other tissues such as intestine, kidney, testis and spleen, even with the highest dose (30 mg/kg). The liver-specific inhibition of sterol synthesis caused parallel reductions in the concentrations of both serum and liver MVA. In addition, there were good correlations between the concentration of either serum or hepatic MVA and the activity of hepatic sterol synthesis. These data indicate that the major origin of serum MVA is the liver, and that the concentration of serum MVA reflects the concentration of hepatic MVA and the activity of hepatic sterol synthesis 2 h after a single oral administration of pravastatin in common marmosets.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of insulin, glucagon, pyruvate, and lactate on the rate of sterol synthesis and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl (HMG)-CoA reductase activity were determined in hepatocytes obtained at different times of the day from rats maintained on a controlled lighting and feeding schedule. In hepatocytes from animals killed immediately before the start of the feeding period (D0 hepatocytes), the initially low activity of HMG-CoA reductase increased during incubation while that in hepatocytes prepared 6 h later (D6 hepatocytes) remained constantly high. The rates of sterol synthesis followed similar patterns of change. In both D0 and D6 cells, insulin stimulated HMG-CoA reductase but had little or no effect on the rates of sterol synthesis. In both types of cell preparation glucagon maximally suppressed HMG-CoA reductase activity at a concentration of 10(-7) M, but there was relatively little change in the rates of sterol synthesis. Both pyruvate and lactate mitigated the glucagon-mediated inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase. Each of these lipogenic precursors alone suppressed the rate of sterol synthesis in a dose-dependent manner. These changes were more apparent in the simultaneous presence of insulin and were greater in the D0 compared to the D6 hepatocytes. In the presence of lactate or pyruvate, the activity of HMG-CoA reductase was elevated, and the increase was greater when insulin was simultaneously present. In general, changes in the rate of fatty acid synthesis were positively correlated with changes in the activity of HMG-CoA reductase. These observations suggest that the latter changes are required to compensate for variations in the availability of simple precursors for sterol synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Tissue selectivity of pravastatin sodium (pravastatin), lovastatin and simvastatin, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors was examined by measuring inhibition of de novo sterol synthesis and active drug concentrations in the liver, spleen and testis in rats after a single oral administration (25 mg/kg) of these drugs. Regarding tissue drug concentrations, all three drugs were liver selective: concentrations of drugs in the liver were about ten-times higher than those in the spleen and testis. On the other hand, pravastatin was far more liver selective in inhibiting sterol synthesis than two other inhibitors: pravastatin inhibited de novo sterol synthesis in the liver but minimally in the spleen and testis, whereas lovastatin and simvastatin inhibited in all three tissues. Microautoradiographic and in vitro cellular-uptake studies demonstrated that pravastatin remained in the extracellular space in the spleen, whereas the other drugs entered the cell. We conclude that pravastatin exhibits a liver-selective inhibition of sterol synthesis because the agent permeates the cell membrane in the liver, but not in non-hepatic tissues.  相似文献   

8.
3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase exists in interconvertible active and inactive forms in cultured fibroblasts from normal and familial hypercholesterolemic subjects. The inactive form can be activated by endogenous or added phosphoprotein phosphatase. Active or partially active HMG-CoA reductase in cell extracts was inactivated by a ATP-Mg-dependent reductase kinase. Incubation of phosphorylated (inactive) HMG-CoA reductase with purified phosphoprotein phosphatase was associated with dephosphorylation (reactivation) and complete restoration of HMG-CoA reductase activity. Low density lipoprotein, 25-hydroxycholesterol, 7-ketocholesterol, and mevalonolactone suppressed HMG-CoA reductase activity by a short-term mechanism involving reversible phosphorylation. 25-Hydroxycholesterol, which enters cells without the requirement of low density lipoprotein-receptor binding, inhibited the HMG-CoA reductase activity in familial hypercholesterolemic cells by reversible phosphorylation. Measurement of the short-term effects of inhibitors on the rate of cholesterol synthesis from radiolabeled acetate revealed that HMG-CoA reductase phosphorylation was responsible for rapid suppression of sterol synthesis. Reductase kinase activity of cultured fibroblasts was also affected by reversible phosphorylation. The active (phosphorylated) reductase kinase can be inactivated by dephosphorylation with phosphatase. Inactive reductase kinase can be reactivated by phosphorylation with ATP-Mg and a second protein kinase from rat liver, designated reductase kinase kinase. Reductase kinase kinase activity has been shown to be present in the extracts of cultured fibroblasts. The combined results represent the initial demonstration of a short-term regulation of HMG-CoA reductase activity and cholesterol synthesis in normal and receptor-negative cultured fibroblasts involving reversible phosphorylation of both HMG-CoA reductase and reductase kinase.  相似文献   

9.
Tissue selectivity of pravastatin sodium (pravastatin) in inhibition of cholesterol synthesis was investigated and its effect was compared with other 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors, such as lovastatin, simvastatin and ML-236B. Inhibition of cholesterol synthesis in vivo was measured by incorporation of radioactivity into the sterol fraction 1 h after intraperitoneal injection of [14C]acetate to mice. The drugs were orally administered to mice 2 h before the acetate injection. When pravastatin at a dose of 20 mg/kg was administered to mice, about 90% inhibition of cholesterol synthesis was observed in liver and ileum, but the inhibition was less than 14% in kidney, spleen, adrenal, testis, prostate and brain. This tissue selectivity of pravastatin was also demonstrated even in varying doses (5-100 mg/kg) and time (75-180 min) after drug administration. Other 3-hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors did not show such a tissue-selective inhibition of sterol synthesis under the same conditions. These results obtained with the in vivo study were confirmed in vitro by the inhibition of sterol synthesis in various cultured cells and rats lenses, as well as by cellular uptake of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors.  相似文献   

10.
Recently, a novel oxysterol, 5-cholesten-3beta, 25-diol 3-sulfate (25HC3S) was identified in primary rat hepatocytes following overexpression of the cholesterol transport protein, StarD1. This oxysterol was also detected in human liver nuclei. In the present study, 25HC3S was chemically synthesized. Addition of 25HC3S (6 microM) to human hepatocytes markedly inhibited cholesterol biosynthesis. Quantitative RT-PCR and Western blot analysis showed that 25HC3S markedly decreased HMG-CoA reductase mRNA and protein levels. Coincidently, 25HC3S inhibited the activation of sterol regulatory element binding proteins (SREBPs), suggesting that inhibition of cholesterol biosynthesis occurred via blocking SREBP-1 activation, and subsequently by inhibiting the expression of HMG CoA reductase. 25HC3S also decreased SREBP-1 mRNA levels and inhibited the expression of target genes encoding acetyl CoA carboxylase-1 (ACC-1) and fatty acid synthase (FAS). In contrast, 25-hydroxycholesterol increased SREBP1 and FAS mRNA levels in primary human hepatocytes. The results imply that 25HC3S is a potent regulator of SREBP mediated lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), a reagent commonly employed for the inhibition of serine proteases, has been found to cause significant inhibition of the incorporation of labeled acetate, but not mevalonate, into nonsaponifiable lipid and digitonin-precipitable sterols in the 10,000 X g supernatant fraction of rat liver homogenate preparations. In two experiments, the extent of inhibition of the synthesis of digitonin-precipitable sterols from acetate by PMSF at 1 mM was 81 and 65%. PMSF inhibited the synthesis of nonsaponifiable lipid from acetate at concentrations as low as 0.1 microM. Preincubation of the 10,000 X g supernatant fraction of rat liver homogenates with PMSF (1 mM) resulted in a significant reduction of the activities of acetate thiokinase and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaric acid (HMG)-CoA synthase, but did not affect the activities of acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase. Preincubation of rat liver microsomes with PMSF (1 mM) caused a 50% reduction in the level of HMG-CoA reductase activity. The combined results indicate that major sites of action of PMSF in the inhibition of sterol biosynthesis from labeled acetate appear to be on the activities of acetate thiokinase, HMG-CoA synthase, and HMG-CoA reductase. Another reagent used to inhibit serine proteases, diisopropylfluorophosphate, had (at a concentration of 1 mM) no effect on the activities of cytosolic acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase, HMG-CoA synthase, and HMG-CoA reductase.  相似文献   

12.
Incubation of rat hepatocytes for 3 hours in a sterol-free medium containing 1.5% albumin resulted in efflux of cellular sterol into the medium and an increased activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase. The secretion of cholesterol was inhibited when cells were incubated with glucagon, norepinephrine, or dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Glucagon and dibutyryl cyclic AMP also inhibited the induction of HMG-CoA reductase. Norepinephrine treatment resulted in a decrease in the synthesis and secretion of proteins but caused an increase in reductase activity. Insulin treatment had no effect either on reductase activity or on sterol efflux from rat hepatocytes.  相似文献   

13.
In this paper, we assess the relative degree of regulation of the rate-limiting enzyme of isoprenoid biosynthesis, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase, by sterol and nonsterol products of mevalonate by utilizing cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells blocked in sterol synthesis. We also examine the two other enzymes of mevalonate biosynthesis, acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase and HMG-CoA synthase, for regulation by mevalonate supplements. These studies indicate that in proliferating fibroblasts, treatment with mevalonic acid can produce a suppression of HMG-CoA reductase activity similar to magnitude to that caused by oxygenated sterols. In contrast, HMG-CoA synthase and acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase are only weakly regulated by mevalonate when compared with 25-hydroxycholesterol. Furthermore, neither HMG-CoA synthase nor acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase exhibits the multivalent control response by sterol and mevalonate supplements in the absence of endogenous mevalonate synthesis which is characteristic of nonsterol regulation of HMG-CoA reductase. These observations suggest that nonsterol regulation of HMG-CoA reductase is specific to that enzyme in contrast to the pleiotropic regulation of enzymes of sterol biosynthesis observed with oxygenated sterols. In Chinese hamster ovary cells supplemented with mevalonate at concentrations that are inhibitory to reductase activity, at least 80% of the inhibition appears to be mediated by nonsterol products of mevalonate. In addition, feed-back regulation of HMG-CoA reductase by endogenously synthesized nonsterol isoprenoids in the absence of exogenous sterol or mevalonate supplements also produces a 70% inhibition of the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

14.
Rat hepatocytes were used to demonstrate rapid, transient effects on the modulation state (defined as the fraction of the enzyme present in the catalytically active form) of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase (HMG-CoA reductase, E.C. 1.1.1.34). Insulin elevated, while glucagon, cAMP or cGMP lowered HMG-CoA reductase modulation state within 10 to 15 min. These changes were accompanied by a parallel change in sterol synthesis. Total HMG-CoA reductase activity was not altered. Rapid modulation of HMG-CoA reductase activity therefore constitutes a viable in vivo control mechanism. By contrast to the hormones and second messengers, mevalonolactone lowered both HMG-CoA reductase modulation state and total reductase quantity.  相似文献   

15.
3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase activity was determined in microsomes from human skin fibroblasts and rat liver that had been variously manipulated in vivo or in tissue culture to up- and down-regulate the enzyme. The cholesterol content of these microsomal preparations was then altered by depletion to or enrichment from either cholesterol-free or cholesterol-rich lipid vesicles. Microsomes from human skin fibroblasts responded to cholesterol depletion by increasing HMG-CoA reductase activity and by decreasing it in response to cholesterol enrichment. This was independent of the initial enzyme activity or the tissue culture conditions. Alterations in cholesterol content of rat liver microsomes in vitro failed to demonstrate any significant changes in HMG-CoA reductase activity whether the microsomes started with low enzyme activity (cholesterol-fed rats) or with high enzyme activity (cholestyramine-treated rats). The results are discussed in relation to previously published data and in respect to differences in the control of the human skin fibroblast and rat liver enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
The activity of acetoacetyl-CoA (AcAc-CoA) ligase (E.C.6.2.1.16) in hepatocytes from rats was shown to be the same as the activity in homogenates of their livers. In hepatocytes treated with 25-hydroxycholesterol, AcAc-CoA ligase, 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase and rates of sterol synthesis were substantially decreased. Hepatocytes treated with high density lipoprotein (HDL) exhibited a 2 to 4 fold induction of HMG-CoA reductase activity; however an accompanying increase in AcAc-CoA ligase activity and the rate of cholesterol synthesis was not observed. We conclude (a) that increases in the activity of HMG-CoA reductase when mediated by HDL in hepatocytes do not result in a corresponding change in the capacity for sterol synthesis and (b) that changes in the activity state of HMG-CoA reductase can be dissociated from that of AcAc-CoA ligase.  相似文献   

17.
CS-514 is a tissue-selective inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase, a key enzyme in cholesterol synthesis. For the microsomal enzyme from rat liver, the mode of inhibition is competitive with respect to hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA, and the Ki value is 2.3 X 10(-9) M. CS-514 also strongly inhibited the sterol synthesis from [14C]acetate in cell-free enzyme systems from rat liver and in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes; the concentrations required for 50% inhibition were 0.8 ng/ml and 2.2 ng/ml, respectively. On the other hand, the inhibition by CS-514 was much less in the cells from nonhepatic tissues such as freshly isolated rat spleen cells, and cultured mouse L cells and human skin fibroblasts. In addition, the cellular uptake of 14C-labeled CS-514 by isolated rat spleen cells or mouse L cells was less than one-tenth of that by isolated hepatocytes. These differences between hepatic and nonhepatic cells were further confirmed by the fact that CS-514 orally administered to rats inhibited sterol synthesis selectively in liver and intestine, the major sites of cholesterogenesis. CS-514 markedly reduced serum cholesterol levels in dogs, monkeys and rabbits, including Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic (WHHL) rabbits, an animal model for familial hypercholesterolemia in man, but did not reduce those in rats and mice. In the former case, preferential lowering of atherogenic lipoproteins was observed in all of the animals tested. The biliary neutral sterols significantly decreased, whereas the amount of biliary bile acids was not affected by administration of the drug to dogs.  相似文献   

18.
The subcellular localization of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase in rat intestine was reinvestigated. Highly enriched fractions of endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria were prepared from mucosal cells. The highest specific activity of HMG-CoA reductase was located in the endoplasmic reticulum fraction with recovery of 25% of the total activity. The mitochondria had low specific activity and low recovery of reductase activity relative to whole homogenate (2-5%). Despite attempts to maximize cell lysis, much of the activity (about 60%) was recovered in a low speed pellet which consisted of whole cells, nuclei, and cell debris as determined by light microscopy. Taken together, the evidence strongly suggests that much of the cellular HMG-CoA reductase activity is present in the endoplasmic reticulum fraction and that mitochondria have little or no intrinsic HMG-CoA reductase. The in vitro regulation of intestinal microsomal HMG-CoA reductase was studied. The intestine possesses a cytosolic HMG-CoA reductase kinase-phosphatase system which appears to be closely related to that present in the liver. Intestinal reductase activity in microsomes prepared from whole mucosal scrapings was inhibited 40-50% by the presence of 50 mM NaF in the homogenizing buffer. It was less susceptible to the action of the kinase than liver reductase. The effects of NaF were reversed by incubation with partially purified intestinal or liver phosphatases. These results suggest that the kinase-phosphatase system could play a role in the regulation of intestinal sterol and isoprene synthesis in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
20.
1. Compactin, (-)-hydroxycitrate and dexamethasone gave rise to a decrease in the rate of cholesterol production in hepatocytes from fed rats by interfering with the flow of substrate into the sterol biosynthetic pathway. The cells responded to the deficit of biosynthetic sterol by increasing the activity of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase (HMG-CoA reductase). 2. Compactin and (-)-hydroxycitrate gave similar results in hepatocytes from rats starved for 24 h but in this case dexamethasone had no significant effect. 3. Exogenous oleate interferes with the production of carbohydrate-derived acetyl-CoA and also gives rise initially to opposing effects on the rate of sterol synthesis and HMG-CoA reductase activity. Over a longer period, however, oleate itself was capable of replacing carbohydrate as the major source of carbon for sterol synthesis. 4. The increase in HMG-CoA reductase activity observed when liver cells were incubated in the presence of compactin, (-)-hydroxycitrate or oleate could be partially reversed by the simultaneous presence of glucagon. 5. Under some physiological conditions, a deficiency of biosynthetic cholesterol or of a related precursor may lead to an increase in the activity of HMG-CoA reductase.  相似文献   

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