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THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study

Chylomicrons containing labeled cholesterol, mainly (70%) present as cholesteryl ester, were injected intravenously into intact rats, and samples of liver were obtained 27–210 min later. Most (58–75%) of the injected label was recovered in the liver after 27–75 min. Hepatic uptake occurred without h...

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Autores principales: Stein, Olga, Stein, Yechezkiel, Goodman, Dewitt S., Fidge, Noel H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1969
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5351399
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author Stein, Olga
Stein, Yechezkiel
Goodman, Dewitt S.
Fidge, Noel H.
author_facet Stein, Olga
Stein, Yechezkiel
Goodman, Dewitt S.
Fidge, Noel H.
author_sort Stein, Olga
collection PubMed
description Chylomicrons containing labeled cholesterol, mainly (70%) present as cholesteryl ester, were injected intravenously into intact rats, and samples of liver were obtained 27–210 min later. Most (58–75%) of the injected label was recovered in the liver after 27–75 min. Hepatic uptake occurred without hydrolysis of the labeled cholesteryl ester. In separate experiments, in vitro perfusion of livers of similarly treated rats for 30–35 min washed out only 3–9% of the labeled sterol. Samples of liver and small intestine were prepared for electron microscopy with Aquon as the dehydrating agent. Good retention (70% or more) of labeled cholesterol and satisfactory preservation of ultrastructure were obtained. After 30 min, the radioautographic reaction was localized mainly over the region of the cell boundary of the parenchymal liver cells, with fewer grains being present over intracellular organelles. At later time intervals, when considerable hydrolysis of the labeled cholesteryl ester had occurred, the radioautographic reaction was more evenly distributed. Phagocytosed labeled lipid was seen in Kupffer cells after the larger lipid load; phagocytosis by parenchymal cells was not seen. In other experiments, cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity was found in all subcellular fractions, the microsome and plasma membrane fractions showing the highest activity per mg protein. The mechanism of cholesteryl ester transport into the liver cell may involve: (1) hydrolysis at the cell surface; or (2) slow entry of intact molecules followed by intracellular hydrolysis of the ester bond.
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spelling pubmed-21078022008-05-01 THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study Stein, Olga Stein, Yechezkiel Goodman, Dewitt S. Fidge, Noel H. J Cell Biol Article Chylomicrons containing labeled cholesterol, mainly (70%) present as cholesteryl ester, were injected intravenously into intact rats, and samples of liver were obtained 27–210 min later. Most (58–75%) of the injected label was recovered in the liver after 27–75 min. Hepatic uptake occurred without hydrolysis of the labeled cholesteryl ester. In separate experiments, in vitro perfusion of livers of similarly treated rats for 30–35 min washed out only 3–9% of the labeled sterol. Samples of liver and small intestine were prepared for electron microscopy with Aquon as the dehydrating agent. Good retention (70% or more) of labeled cholesterol and satisfactory preservation of ultrastructure were obtained. After 30 min, the radioautographic reaction was localized mainly over the region of the cell boundary of the parenchymal liver cells, with fewer grains being present over intracellular organelles. At later time intervals, when considerable hydrolysis of the labeled cholesteryl ester had occurred, the radioautographic reaction was more evenly distributed. Phagocytosed labeled lipid was seen in Kupffer cells after the larger lipid load; phagocytosis by parenchymal cells was not seen. In other experiments, cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity was found in all subcellular fractions, the microsome and plasma membrane fractions showing the highest activity per mg protein. The mechanism of cholesteryl ester transport into the liver cell may involve: (1) hydrolysis at the cell surface; or (2) slow entry of intact molecules followed by intracellular hydrolysis of the ester bond. The Rockefeller University Press 1969-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2107802/ /pubmed/5351399 Text en Copyright © 1969 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stein, Olga
Stein, Yechezkiel
Goodman, Dewitt S.
Fidge, Noel H.
THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title_full THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title_fullStr THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title_full_unstemmed THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title_short THE METABOLISM OF CHYLOMICRON CHOLESTERYL ESTER IN RAT LIVER : A Combined Radioautographic-Electron Microscopic and Biochemical Study
title_sort metabolism of chylomicron cholesteryl ester in rat liver : a combined radioautographic-electron microscopic and biochemical study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5351399
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