Abstract

Increase in the density of liver lysosomes after leupeptin administration was marked in starved rats but only slight in starved-refed rats. The levels of several intracellular enzymes in the liver lysosome fraction purified from leupeptin-treated rats were about 10 to 30 times more in starved rats than in refed rats. However, there was no difference between the intralysosomal levels of endocytosed FITC-labeled asialofetuin in starved and refed rats, indicating that refeeding after starvation markedly suppressed autophagy but not heterophagy in vivo. Immunohistochemical studies with cathepsin B and asialofetuin Fab'-peroxidase conjugates showed that refeeding after starvation markedly altered the cellular distribution of cathepsin B in the liver, resulting in a linear arrangement of the enzyme only on the periphery of hepatocytes. In contrast, endocytosed asialofetuin was found only in the periphery of hepatocytes of both starved and starved-refed rats. These results indicate that autophagy and heterophagy are regulated by different mechanisms in vivo.

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