Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.

The metabolism of [1-3H]retinol- and [4-14C]cholesterol-labeled chylomicrons was studied in normal and cholesterol-fed dogs in order to estimate the relative contribution of chylomicron remnant cholesterol to diet-induced hypercholesterolemia. The plasma t 1/2 of intravenously administered Sf greate...

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Main Authors: G W Melchior, R W Mahley, D K Buckhold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1981-05-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520373703
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spelling doaj-6de2e18c976843fcb1f51f87b7d7a8922021-04-24T05:50:13ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751981-05-01224598609Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.G W MelchiorR W MahleyD K BuckholdThe metabolism of [1-3H]retinol- and [4-14C]cholesterol-labeled chylomicrons was studied in normal and cholesterol-fed dogs in order to estimate the relative contribution of chylomicron remnant cholesterol to diet-induced hypercholesterolemia. The plasma t 1/2 of intravenously administered Sf greater than 400 chylomicrons, Sf 20-400 chylomicrons, and whole lymph doubly labeled with [1-3H]retinol and [4-14C]cholesterol was not significantly prolonged in hypercholesterolemic recipients. When Sf greater than 400 chylomicrons were administered intravenously, 90% of the radioactivity was cleared from the plasma of both normal and cholesterol-fed dogs within 1 hr and 68 +/- 18% appeared in the liver within approximately 2 hr in normal dogs and 4 hr in hypercholesterolemic dogs. The use of the retinol-labeling technique for intestinal lipoproteins provided evidence that some LDL, but essentially none of the HDLc, was derived from d greater than 1.006 g/ml lymph lipoproteins. The failure of significant radioactivity to accumulate in the plasma compartment of hypercholesterolemic dogs after intravenous administration of doubly labeled chylomicrons and the relatively efficient uptake of radioactivity by the liver indicate that the dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs is not the result of impaired hepatic removal of chylomicron remnants.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520373703
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G W Melchior
R W Mahley
D K Buckhold
spellingShingle G W Melchior
R W Mahley
D K Buckhold
Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet G W Melchior
R W Mahley
D K Buckhold
author_sort G W Melchior
title Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
title_short Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
title_full Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
title_fullStr Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
title_full_unstemmed Chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
title_sort chylomicron metabolism during dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1981-05-01
description The metabolism of [1-3H]retinol- and [4-14C]cholesterol-labeled chylomicrons was studied in normal and cholesterol-fed dogs in order to estimate the relative contribution of chylomicron remnant cholesterol to diet-induced hypercholesterolemia. The plasma t 1/2 of intravenously administered Sf greater than 400 chylomicrons, Sf 20-400 chylomicrons, and whole lymph doubly labeled with [1-3H]retinol and [4-14C]cholesterol was not significantly prolonged in hypercholesterolemic recipients. When Sf greater than 400 chylomicrons were administered intravenously, 90% of the radioactivity was cleared from the plasma of both normal and cholesterol-fed dogs within 1 hr and 68 +/- 18% appeared in the liver within approximately 2 hr in normal dogs and 4 hr in hypercholesterolemic dogs. The use of the retinol-labeling technique for intestinal lipoproteins provided evidence that some LDL, but essentially none of the HDLc, was derived from d greater than 1.006 g/ml lymph lipoproteins. The failure of significant radioactivity to accumulate in the plasma compartment of hypercholesterolemic dogs after intravenous administration of doubly labeled chylomicrons and the relatively efficient uptake of radioactivity by the liver indicate that the dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia in dogs is not the result of impaired hepatic removal of chylomicron remnants.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520373703
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