Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose

Rabbits fed 0.35% of cholesterol in diets containing either 29.35% of lactose or sucrose were studied for 14 weeks. The rabbits fed lactose had higher plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations than those fed sucrose. The half-life of cholesterol was 19.0 days and 35.0 days for rabbits fed sucrose...

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Main Authors: N. Iritani, W.W. Wells
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1966-05-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520389641
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spelling doaj-6cd9c57e83f3432793946d046730b8d62021-04-23T06:10:37ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751966-05-0173372378Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactoseN. Iritani0W.W. Wells1Biochemistry Department, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaBiochemistry Department, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaRabbits fed 0.35% of cholesterol in diets containing either 29.35% of lactose or sucrose were studied for 14 weeks. The rabbits fed lactose had higher plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations than those fed sucrose. The half-life of cholesterol was 19.0 days and 35.0 days for rabbits fed sucrose and lactose, respectively. The half-life, pool size, and daily production of deoxycholic acid were 9.7 days, 1.29 g, and 74.1 mg for rabbits fed sucrose; and 14.2 days, 1.40 g, and 49.1 mg, for those fed lactose. Cholesterol was the major neutral sterol in the feces of the rabbits fed lactose, whereas coprostanol (5Β-cholestan-3Β-ol) dominated the corresponding fraction in those fed sucrose.The fecal steroid composition did not vary between day and night collections. No sterol esters were detected in the feces. Urinary elimination of radioactivity was less than 10% of that injected.The ``lactose effect'' seems to be due to enhanced retention of steroids, the mechanism of which has not been elucidated.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520389641rabbitdietsucroselactoseturnovercholesterol
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. Iritani
W.W. Wells
spellingShingle N. Iritani
W.W. Wells
Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
Journal of Lipid Research
rabbit
diet
sucrose
lactose
turnover
cholesterol
author_facet N. Iritani
W.W. Wells
author_sort N. Iritani
title Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
title_short Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
title_full Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
title_fullStr Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
title_full_unstemmed Turnover of cholesterol-4-14C and cholic acid-24-14C by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
title_sort turnover of cholesterol-4-14c and cholic acid-24-14c by rabbits fed a diet containing lactose
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1966-05-01
description Rabbits fed 0.35% of cholesterol in diets containing either 29.35% of lactose or sucrose were studied for 14 weeks. The rabbits fed lactose had higher plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations than those fed sucrose. The half-life of cholesterol was 19.0 days and 35.0 days for rabbits fed sucrose and lactose, respectively. The half-life, pool size, and daily production of deoxycholic acid were 9.7 days, 1.29 g, and 74.1 mg for rabbits fed sucrose; and 14.2 days, 1.40 g, and 49.1 mg, for those fed lactose. Cholesterol was the major neutral sterol in the feces of the rabbits fed lactose, whereas coprostanol (5Β-cholestan-3Β-ol) dominated the corresponding fraction in those fed sucrose.The fecal steroid composition did not vary between day and night collections. No sterol esters were detected in the feces. Urinary elimination of radioactivity was less than 10% of that injected.The ``lactose effect'' seems to be due to enhanced retention of steroids, the mechanism of which has not been elucidated.
topic rabbit
diet
sucrose
lactose
turnover
cholesterol
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520389641
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