Role of the liver in low-density-lipoprotein catabolism in the rat

Abstract
Plasma low-density-lipoprotein (LDL) kinetics and hepatic LDL uptake were studied in the rat after an intravenous pulse injection of [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL. Some 96% of injected radioactivity was associated with apoprotein B of LDL (d 1.020-1.050). The disappearance of labelled LDL from plasma was accompanied by a linear increase in the hepatic uptake of LDL, up to 12 h after injection. Oestradiol treatment lowered plasma cholesterol concentration by 58% and the intravascular pool of LDL by 78%. This was associated with a 4-fold increase in the fractional catabolic rate of LDL and a 2-fold increase in the hepatic uptake of LDL. Oestradiol treatment did not significantly change the synthesis rate of LDL; it decreased the skin and lung uptake of LDL, but increased adrenal uptake. These results suggest that the liver plays an important role in the regulation of plasma LDL concentration.

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