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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (fatty liver)
13,941 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Isopropanol and acetone administered to rats in conditions leading to a similar blood acetone level differ markedly in their effects on lipid metabolism. Isopropanol administration determines a fatty liver, which is mainly related to a defect in hepatic lipoprotein synthesis. Acetone administration gives only raise to a slight increase in the liver triacylglycerol level. It does not alter the [1-14C] palmitate, [1-14C] glycerol or [U-14C] leucine incorporation into blood lipoproteins. Acetone does thus not appear to play a preminent role in the isopropanol induced fatty liver which seems to be related mainly to a direct action of the alcohol itself.
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PMID:[Comparison of the effect of acetone and isopropanol on lipid metabolism in rats]. 7 72

The acute effects of the PCB (polychlorinated biphenyls) mixture (Aroclor 1254) on microsomal enzymes and on synthesis and turnover of microsomal and cytoplasmic lipids of rat liver were investigated. Six daily i.p. injections of 25 and 50 mg PCB/kg body weight resulted in increased liver weight and liver to body weight ratios. When compared to controls PCB treatment resulted in a six-fold increase in amount of cytochrome P-450. Activities of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, ethylmorphine demethylase and inosine diphosphatase were increased whereas glucose-6-phosphatase values were decreased by PCB exposure. Analysis of liver homogenate and microsomal fraction revealed an increase in lipid in PCB-exposed animals. Phospholipids, cholesterol and triglyceride were significantly increased after PCB exposure; however, the greatest percentage increase was seen in the triglyceride pool. The finding of an increase in microsomal triglyceride to phospholipid ratios with exposure to PCB is suggestive of an increase in membrane-enclosed lipid (liposomes). Studies with labelled glycerol indicated that the PCB-induced fatty liver resulted from increased half life but not increased synthesis of liver lipid moieties. The rate of incorporation of leucine into microsomal membrane and albumin was somewhat enhanced in rats exposed to PCB indicative of increased protein synthesis. Morphological studies showed increased occurrence of lipid material, both in cytoplasmic droplets and within rough and smooth-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum. Proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum and flattened Golgi cisternae with no secretion granules containing lipoprotein particles characterized the liver from animals exposed for 6 days. The increase in lipid within membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum together with the flattened Golgi lacking typical secretory vesicles indicates a defect in transport of lipoproteins from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus and may be the cause of the PCB-induced fatty liver.
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PMID:Studies on the cellular toxicity of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). I. Effect of PCBs on microsomal enzymes and on synthesis and turnover of microsomal and cytoplasmic lipids of rat liver- a morphological and biochemical study. 9 1

Acute hydrazine exposure elevated rat liver triacylglycerol content and produced a rapid rise in triacylglycerol production from sn-[1,3-14C]glycerol 3-phosphate by liver homogenate and microsomal fractions. Hydrazine treatment also increased the incorporation of [1,3-14C]glycerol into hepatic triacylglycerol by the intact animal. Homogenates of hepatocyte monolayers exposed to hydrazine in vitro also exhibited an increased capacity to form triacylglycerol from sn-[1,3-14C]glycerol 3-phosphate. Hydrazine-dependent increases in hepatic triacylglycerol production measured in vitro correlated well with an increase in microsomal phosphatidate phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.4) activity. Therefore, the fatty liver associated with hydrazine exposure may be explained in part by a rise in the enzymatic capacity of hepatic triacylglycerol biosynthesis.
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PMID:Effect of hydrazine exposure on hepatic triacylglycerol biosynthesis. 48 20

The fatty liver often found in untreated kwashiorkor has been associated with highly variable concentration of circulating lipids. The effect on lipid metabolism of two isocaloric diets--one synthetic monomolecular (Vivonex) and one standard (Casilan)--which both initiated satisfactory clinical improvement was studied in 21 Ethiopian children with kwashiorkor during the first weeks of rehabilitation. Before treatment mean fasting values of all biochemical parameters were within normal ranges except for moderately elevated triglycerides--an unexpected finding-and low insulin. Individual values varied greatly; triglyceride between 0.39 and 3.49 mmol/1. FFA correlated both to glycerol, D-beta-hydroxybutyrate and triglyceride values. During treatment insulin, glucose and glycerol remained essentially unchanged and were similar in both dietary groups. In the Vivonex group only there was an initial marked, parallel fall of FFA and D-beta-hydroxybutyrate suggesting greater availability of carbohydrate and enhanced glucose utilization. This pattern of response seemed to occur without comparable inhibition of lipolysis. Triglycerides--like serum albumin--increased faster in the Casilan group. The highest mean triglyceride value was reached by day 8 in the Casilan group and by day 15 in the Vivonex group. Ten minutes following heparin injection triglycerides declined, FFA and glycerol increased indicating release of in vivo active lipase. LPL activity assayed in vitro was similar and unaffected by 2 weeks of dietary treatment in both groups. LPL activity was inversely correlated to triglycerides providing--beside the type of diet--another possible explanation for the wide variations seen in circulatory triglycerides.
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PMID:Dietary effects in the early recovery phase of kwashiorkor. Plasma levels of triglycerides, FFA, D-beta-hydroxybutyrate, glycerol, postheparin lipoprotein lipase (LPL), glucose and insulin. 127 67

Many mechanisms have been postulated as being responsible for the fatty liver resulting from ethanol ingestion. Lipid mobilization has been strongly implicated in both acute and chronic ethanol administration--the difference between the two lying in the source of the fat. In the acute situation, the lipid is mobilized from depot fat, whereas in the chronic situation, it apparently comes from the diet. One possibility not explored is the mobilization of glycerol. This substance is the backbone of triglyceride. Hence, an influx of glycerol to the liver coupled with increased amounts of fatty acids could help explain, in part, the fatty liver resulting from alcohol administration. The purpose of the following study was to determine if such an effect does occur.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol administration on plasma glycerol levels in the rat. 159 31

Hypertriglyceridemia and fatty liver are common lipid abnormalities associated with Gram-negative sepsis. Fish oils have been shown to have beneficial effects in reducing plasma triglycerides (TG). This study was designed to investigate whether fish oils would prevent the elevation of plasma TG and the accumulation of liver lipids during sepsis. One group of rats was fed a 10% menhaden oil diet and the other group was fed a 10% corn oil diet for 14 days. On the 14th day, sepsis was induced by injecting the rats with 8 x 10(7) live Escherichia coli colonies/100 g of body weight and the rats were fasted for 22 hours. The liver composition of total lipids and TG in the septic rats prefed the fish oil was lower than in the septic rats prefed the corn oil. In the rats adapted to the corn oil diet, lipids accumulated in the livers of the septic rats in comparison with the control rats. Hepatocytes isolated from the septic rats adapted to the corn oil diet showed an increased esterification of [1-14C]palmitate into TG and phospholipids than hepatocytes from the control rats. Feeding the fish oil diet instead of the corn oil diet before inducing sepsis reduced TG, cholesterol, and phospholipid synthesis by 58%, 79%, and 71%, respectively. The rise in TG synthesis in the septic rats prefed the corn oil diet was associated with an 89% increase in the activity of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase. There was no significant difference in the activities of glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase and phosphatidate phosphohydrolase between control and septic rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to a fish oil diet before inducing sepsis in rats prevents fatty infiltration of the liver. 164 Jun 34

Hepatic monoacylglycerol acyltransferase is expressed during the perinatal period in rats and guinea pigs and appears to be related temporally to the availability of fatty acids and to the development of hepatic steatosis. In order to determine when monoacylglycerol acyltransferase activity is expressed in an avian species, its ontogeny was investigated in chick liver total particulate preparations. In livers from 11- to 21-day-old chick embryos, monoacylglycerol acyltransferase specific activity was 34.5 +/- 8.1 nmol/min per mg of total particulate protein. The specific activity decreased 93% to 2.6 +/- 1.3 nmol/min per mg by the 6th day after hatching. The specific activities of fatty acid CoA ligase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase, and microsomal and mitochondrial glycerol-P acyltransferases changed comparatively little during this time period. In the embryos, the monoacylglycerol acyltransferase activity per liver rose 28-fold between the 11th and 21st day, corresponding exactly to the increase in liver total particulate protein during this time. Monoacylglycerol acyltransferase activity in other tissues was 25- to 115-fold lower than observed in liver. Optimal activity was measured using 25 microM palmitoyl-CoA and 50 microM sn-2-monooleoylglycerol. The activity with the 1- and 2-monooleoylglycerol ethers and 1-monooleoylglycerol was very low. In contrast to microsomes from rat liver, about 70% of the product with the 1- and 2-monooleoylglycerol ethers was triradylglycerol, suggesting that the diacylglycerol acyltransferase from chick liver can acylate acyl, alkylglycerols. The activity with sn-2-monooleoylglycerol amide was 12.5% of that observed with the corresponding 2-monooleoylglycerol suggesting that the ester bond is important; the 1-monooleoylglycerol amide was not a substrate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hepatic monoacylglycerol acyltransferase: ontogeny and characterization of an activity associated with the chick embryo. 254 43

(1) A method has been developed to separate hepatocytes, isolated from laying hens, according to their densities, using discontinuous density-gradient centrifugation on Nycodenz. (2) The hepatocytes recovered from the interface of the 5% and 10% Nycodenz layers were rich in triacylglycerol and were termed 'fatty' hepatocytes: 'non-fatty' hepatocytes were obtained from the interface of the 15% and 30% Nycodenz layers and contained less than one-quarter as much triacylglycerol. (3) 'Fatty' hepatocytes incorporated radiolabelled glucose and glycerol into total lipid at more than twice the rate of 'non-fatty' cells: the corresponding increases in the incorporation of radiolabelled choline and valine into phospholipid and protein respectively were smaller and not statistically significant. (4) A higher proportion of glycerol and glucose incorporated into total lipid was found to be phospholipid in the 'non-fatty' hepatocytes. (5) A higher proportion of radiolabelled lipid or protein formed from glycerol or valine respectively was secreted into the medium by the 'non-fatty' hepatocytes. (6) The use of these hepatocytes as a model to study fatty liver syndromes is discussed.
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PMID:The use of two populations of hepatocytes with different triacylglycerol contents as a model to study the accumulation of liver lipid in the laying hen. 305 20

Nile red is a phenoxazone dye that fluoresces intensely, and in varying color, in organic solvents and hydrophobic lipids. However, the fluorescence is fully quenched in water. The dye acts, therefore, as a fluorescent hydrophobic probe. We utilized this novel property of nile red to develop a sensitive fluorescent histochemical stain for tissue lipids. Nile red was prepared by boiling Nile blue A under reflux for 2 hr in 0.5% H2SO4, and extracting the product into xylene. For staining, the purified dye is dissolved in 75% glycerol (1-5 micrograms/ml) and applied to frozen tissue sections. Tissue lipids then fluoresce yellow-gold to red, depending on their relative hydrophobicity. Using sections of liver and aorta from a cholesterol-fed rabbit, we assessed the value of Nile red as a stain for neutral lipids by comparing the staining pattern obtained with that produced by oil red O, a commonly used dye for tissue cholesteryl esters and triacylglycerols. In the cholesterol fatty liver, Nile red staining was comparable to that of oil red O. In contrast, Nile red staining of rabbit aortic atheroma revealed ubiquitous lipid deposits not observed with oil red O staining. These latter results suggest that Nile red can detect neutral lipid deposits, presumably unesterified cholesterol, not usually seen with oil red O or other traditional fat stains.
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PMID:Application of Nile red, a fluorescent hydrophobic probe, for the detection of neutral lipid deposits in tissue sections: comparison with oil red O. 402 99

In rats, chronic ethanol feeding was found to enhance the postprandial hyperlipemia and to increase the incorporation of dietary palmitic acid-(3)H and intravenously injected L-lysine-(14)C into serum lipoproteins. The main increases of total amount, labeling, and specific activity of lipid and protein occurred in the d < 1.019 lipoprotein fraction. Fat absorption and the clearance of injected chylomicrons were not affected by ethanol feeding. Blocking of lipoprotein and chylomicron removal with Triton did not prevent the action of ethanol on serum lipids, indicating that the ethanol effect is not likely due to defective removal of lipids from the circulation. Ethanol enhanced the incorporation of chylomicron fatty acids into newly synthetized very low density lipoproteins, as shown by an increased reappearance of the fatty acid label into the lipids of this fraction after injection of palmitate-(14)C/glycerol-(3)H doubly labeled chylomicrons. These results indicate that alcoholic hyperlipemia is due, at least in part, to an increase in newly synthetized lipoproteins. The hyperlipemia produced by ethanol was accompanied by hepatic steatosis. The simultaneous production of fatty liver and hyperlipemia makes it unlikely that defective lipoprotein synthesis or secretion is a primary mechanism for the pathogenesis of the alcoholic fatty liver.
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PMID:Efcts of chronic ethanol feeding on serum lipoprotein metabolism in the rat. 544 77


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