Abstract: | A high cholesterol diet induced a fatty liver and an increase in cholesterol oleate in spontaneously hypertensive rats. The activity of microsomal glycerophosphate acyltransferase in liver increased 2-3-fold to meet the increased supply of oleate, the synthesis of which was stimulated by a 10-fold increase in microsomal delta 9-desaturase activity. Hepatic fatty acid synthetase and diacylglycerol acyltransferase activities were decreased somewhat. These results, together with the fact that the large increases in hepatic cholesterol ester and triacylglycerol were not correspondingly reflected in plasma, indicated that the fatty liver resulted from decreased secretion of lipoprotein rather than increased lipogenesis. Endogenous cholesterol in liver microsomes increased 2-fold and hepatic acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase activity increased 3-fold, whereas plasma lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity was unchanged. Thus, the increase in cholesterol oleate seen in spontaneously hypertensive rats fed a high cholesterol diet is due mainly to increases in acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase and delta 9-desaturase activities. |