Fatty acid synthesis in the perfused liver of adrenalectomized rats

Abstract
Fatty acid synthesis, measured in the perfused liver of fed adrenalectomized rats with 3H2O and 14C-labeled precursors, was less than in control sham-operated rats. This defect was more extensive for synthesis of fatty acids incorporated into triacylglycerols than into phospholipids. There was impairment in desaturation and export of newly synthesized fatty acid. Fatty acid synthesis and desaturation were restored to normal rates 5 h after treatment with cortisol in vivo. Fatty acid synthesis was seasonally variable, being highest in the winter; the impairment after adrenalectomy was observed in all seasons. In perfusions with oleate (0.7 mM), no further impairment in fatty acid synthesis was discerned in livers from adrenalectomized rats, in which the rate resembled that in control livers. No defect in the incorporation of oleate into glycerides was discerned in livers from adrenalectomized rats. Cortisol exerted no stimulatory effect on fatty acid synthesis when added to perfusion media. The impairment in hepatic lipogenesis, demonstrable after adrenalectomy, shows that adrenal glucocorticoids promote hepatic capacity for fatty acid synthesis de novo, at least in intact non-diabetic rats. This effect may be mediated by insulin, perhaps through direct action on the liver.

This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit: