Abstract

ABSTRACT As the first part of a series of investigations on acetate and cholesterol metabolism, the conversion of acetate to cholesterol was studied in the various compartments of the midgestation foeto-placental unit in perfusion experiments carried out for 90 min at 35–36°C. Following their removal at laparotomy two complete foeto-placental units were perfused each with 5.0 mCi of uniformly labelled sodium acetate-14C + 5.0 mCi of cholesterol-7α-3H. The study was completed by the separate perfusion of two isolated midgestation foetuses and two midgestation placentas. The doses administered in each of these four last experiments were 2.5 mCi of 14C-labelled acetate and 2.5 mCi of 3H-labelled cholesterol. Cholesterol was isolated in a radiochemically homogeneous form from each of the tissues studied. The cholesterol isolated from the placentas, placental perfusates and from the blood bathing the placenta from the maternal side (»maternal perfusates«) contained exclusively 3H-label. On the other hand, the cholesterol isolated from all foetal livers, adrenals, testicles, 3 of 4 residual foetal tissues and 1 out of 4 foetal perfusates also contained significant quantities of 14C-label. It is concluded, that the midgestation human placenta is not capable of synthesizing cholesterol from acetate, but that the conversion of acetate to cholesterol is a quantitatively significant metabolic pathway in the human foetus at midgestation.

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