Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.

Great amounts of plasma membranes are formed during early postnatal development of the ocular lens as lens epithelial cells differentiate into fiber cells. Little information is available on the source of the lipids, and particularly cholesterol, required for formation of these plasma membranes. The...

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Main Author: R J Cenedella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1982-05-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381268
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spelling doaj-b4a438ac32684e7a958b9775418401612021-04-24T05:50:52ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751982-05-01234619626Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.R J CenedellaGreat amounts of plasma membranes are formed during early postnatal development of the ocular lens as lens epithelial cells differentiate into fiber cells. Little information is available on the source of the lipids, and particularly cholesterol, required for formation of these plasma membranes. The present study measured the capacity of the lens of the rat to synthesize cholesterol during this dynamic period of growth. Incorporation by lens of (3)H(2)O into total fatty acids was also examined. Absolute rates of cholesterol synthesis per whole lens were estimated in vitro from incorporation of (3)H from (3)H(2)O into digitonide precipitable sterols (DPS) by intact lenses of 6- to 30-day old rats. Rates of cholesterol synthesis were calculated which were adequate to furnish from either 50-100% or 20-40% of the cholesterol required by the lens for growth, depending upon the animal's age and upon whether one considered NADPH to be generated by the pentose phosphate pathway or by oxidative enzymatic processes (NADPH from the pentose pathway is not labeled from (3)H(2)O). Generation of the NADPH necessary for cholesterol synthesis principally by the pentose pathway would support the higher percent contribution of synthesis to the total growth requirement. The pentose pathway was clearly active in the young rat lens, since between 7.5 to 9.0 times more [1-(14)C]glucose than [6-(14)C]glucose was oxidized in vitro to (14)CO(2) by 6- and 22-day old lenses. Incorporation of (3)H(2)O into DPS decreases sharply after 2 weeks of age in spite of a constant rate of cholesterol accumulation by the lens. These results indicate that the ocular lens of the rat can furnish most if not all of its cholesterol requirements by synthesis de novo during the first 2 weeks of life, and imply a contribution from another source at older ages. Whether lipoproteins can supply cholesterol to the lens is still unclear, although neither HDL nor LDL altered the incorporation in vitro of [U-(14)C]glucose into DPS by lens.-Cenedella, R. J. Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381268
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R J Cenedella
spellingShingle R J Cenedella
Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet R J Cenedella
author_sort R J Cenedella
title Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
title_short Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
title_full Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
title_fullStr Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
title_full_unstemmed Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
title_sort sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1982-05-01
description Great amounts of plasma membranes are formed during early postnatal development of the ocular lens as lens epithelial cells differentiate into fiber cells. Little information is available on the source of the lipids, and particularly cholesterol, required for formation of these plasma membranes. The present study measured the capacity of the lens of the rat to synthesize cholesterol during this dynamic period of growth. Incorporation by lens of (3)H(2)O into total fatty acids was also examined. Absolute rates of cholesterol synthesis per whole lens were estimated in vitro from incorporation of (3)H from (3)H(2)O into digitonide precipitable sterols (DPS) by intact lenses of 6- to 30-day old rats. Rates of cholesterol synthesis were calculated which were adequate to furnish from either 50-100% or 20-40% of the cholesterol required by the lens for growth, depending upon the animal's age and upon whether one considered NADPH to be generated by the pentose phosphate pathway or by oxidative enzymatic processes (NADPH from the pentose pathway is not labeled from (3)H(2)O). Generation of the NADPH necessary for cholesterol synthesis principally by the pentose pathway would support the higher percent contribution of synthesis to the total growth requirement. The pentose pathway was clearly active in the young rat lens, since between 7.5 to 9.0 times more [1-(14)C]glucose than [6-(14)C]glucose was oxidized in vitro to (14)CO(2) by 6- and 22-day old lenses. Incorporation of (3)H(2)O into DPS decreases sharply after 2 weeks of age in spite of a constant rate of cholesterol accumulation by the lens. These results indicate that the ocular lens of the rat can furnish most if not all of its cholesterol requirements by synthesis de novo during the first 2 weeks of life, and imply a contribution from another source at older ages. Whether lipoproteins can supply cholesterol to the lens is still unclear, although neither HDL nor LDL altered the incorporation in vitro of [U-(14)C]glucose into DPS by lens.-Cenedella, R. J. Sterol synthesis by the ocular lens of the rat during postnatal development.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520381268
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