Abstract
1. The inclusion of sucrose in the diet of rats led to an increase in hepatic fatty acid synthetase activity compared with that of rats fed with starch as the sole carbohydrate. The higher activity occurred within 18h of the introduction of sucrose and persisted with fluctuations for the 30 days of the experiment. Reversal of the diets in some rats after 21 days led to changes in the enzyme activity to values appropriate to the second diet. The plasma triglyceride concentration followed a similar pattern. 2. A comparison of the effects of diets with starch, glucose, maltose, sucrose or fructose showed that fructose gave the highest values of triglyceride content and of fatty acid synthetase activity in liver, but the lowest values of the synthetase activity in adipose tissue and the lowest values of plasma insulin concentration. These effects may perhaps be attributed to the low insulin response to fructose and to the high affinity of the liver for this sugar. 3. When the diet contained fructose or sucrose there was a correlation between hepatic synthetase activity and plasma triglyceride concentration. Neither of these, however, was related to plasma insulin concentration. On the other hand, there was a correlation between plasma insulin concentration and fatty acid synthetase activity in adipose tissue. 4. When rats were starved and then re-fed the differences in enzyme activities induced by fructose or glucose were minimized. This, together with the varying degree of difference during the course of the experiments, may explain why other workers, using the starvation-re-feeding technique and making measurements on one day only, have failed to observe differences in the activities of lipogenic enzymes in animals fed with either fructose or glucose.
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