Abstract
Hepatocytes were prepared from 10-11-day lactating rat dams and from lactating dams which had been weaned for periods of either 1-2 days or 7 days. Hepatocytes from each group were cultured for periods of up to 48 h in a chemically defined medium. Compared with those from the 7-day weaned animals, hepatocytes from the lactating rats were resistant to the inhibitory effects of insulin on the secretion of very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) triacylglycerol (TAG). These differences persisted for up to 48 h in culture. Hepatocytes from the 1-2 day weaned animals remained relatively insulin-resistant in this respect. Similar differences in the response to insulin were not observed for the secretion of VLDL apolipoprotein B. TAG production increased and ketogenesis decreased in the hepatocytes from the lactating compared with those from the 7-day weaned rats. Insensitivity of the liver to the normal effects of insulin on the secretion of VLDL TAG may arise from a need to maintain an adequate flux of hepatic lipids to the lactating mammary gland in order to meet the large demand for milk-fat production.
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