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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 24, 977-992, Copyright © 1983 by Lipid Research, Inc.
DD Black, P Tso, S Weidman and SM Sabesin
D-(+)-galactosamine (GalN) induces severe reversible hepatocellular injury
in the rat accompanied by lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT)
deficiency, defective chylomicron (CM) catabolism, and accumulation of
abnormal plasma lipoproteins (Lps), including discoidal high density
lipoproteins (HDL). These abnormalities are presumed to result from hepatic
injury alone, but the effect of GalN on intestinal Lps has not been
studied. To assess possible effects on intestinal Lp formation and
secretion, mesenteric lymph fistula rats were injected with GalN or saline.
Twenty-four hours later a 2-hr fasting lymph sample was collected; this was
followed by an 8-hr duodenal infusion of a lipid emulsion containing 17.7
mM [3H]triolein at 3 ml/hr. Fasting lymph and fat-infused lymph flow rates,
3H, triglyceride, and cholesterol output, residual 3H in intestinal lumen
and mucosa, total 3H recovery, and d less than 1.006 g/ml Lp size and lipid
composition were unchanged by GalN treatment, but d less than 1.006 g/ml
Lps were depleted of apoE and C. Fat-infused lymph phospholipid (PL) output
was higher in GalN rats due to PL-enriched d greater than 1.006 g/ml Lps.
Electron microscopy of lymph and plasma LDL and HDL revealed spherical Lps
in all samples. GalN plasma, fasting lymph, and fat-infused lymph also
contained large abnormal LDL and discoidal HDL. Control lymph LDL and HDL
did not differ in size from control plasma LDL and HDL. Control lymph LDL
contained both apoB240K and B335K. However, spherical LDL and discoidal HDL
in fasting lymph from GalN rats differed significantly in size from the
corresponding plasma particles and became closer in size to the plasma
particles with fat infusion. GalN lymph LDL contained only apoB240K and had
a lower PL/CE than GalN plasma LDL. GalN fasting lymph HDL, depleted of
apoC and having a PL/CE of 5, became enriched in apoE and the PL/CE
increased to 10 with fat infusion to closely resemble GalN plasma HDL. GalN
reduces apoE and C (mainly of hepatic origin) in d less than 1.006 g/ml gut
Lps, which may contribute to the CM catabolic defect in GalN rats. Lymph
LDL and HDL, especially in fasting lymph, may be partially gut-derived with
increased filtration of plasma Lps into lymph with fat infusion. GalN
fat-infused lymph HDL is enriched in apoE, but unable to transfer apoE to d
less than 1.006 g/ml intestinal Lps. We conclude that GalN hepatitis is a
model that allows study of intestinal Lps with normal lipid digestion and
absorption in the face of severe hepatic injury and LCAT deficiency.
ARTICLES
Intestinal lipoproteins in the rat with D-(+)-galactosamine hepatitis
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