Abstract: | A new sensitive method for the assay of retinyl ester hydrolase in vitro was developed and applied to liver homogenates of 18 young pigs with depleted-to-adequate liver vitamin A reserves. Radioactive substrate was not required, because the formation of retinol could be adequately quantitated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Optimal hydrolase activity was observed with 500 microM retinyl palmitate, 100 mM 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate, and 2 mg/ml Triton X-100 at pH 8.0. The relative rates of hydrolysis of six different retinyl esters by liver homogenate were: retinyl linolenate (100%), myristate (99%), palmitate (47%), oleate (38%), linoleate (31%), and stearate (29%). The enzyme was found primarily in the membrane-containing fractions of liver (59 +/- 3%, S.E.) and kidney (76 +/- 3%), with considerably lower overall activity in kidney (57-375 nmol/h per g of tissue) than in liver (394-1040 nmol/h per g). Retinyl ester hydrolase activity in these pigs was independent of serum retinol values, which ranged from 3 to 24 micrograms/dl, and of liver vitamin A concentrations from 0 to 32 micrograms/g. Pig liver retinyl ester hydrolase differs from the rat liver enzyme in its substrate specificity, bile acid stimulation, and interanimal variability. |