Abstract
Male Wistar rats were given 200 mg/kg/day nicotinic acid or 1000 mg/kg/day cholestyramine by stomach tube for ten days. Peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA oxidation (cyanide-insensitive) and the activities of palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase and urate oxidase were significantly increased in the total liver homogenate. Subcellular fractionation showed enhanced enzyme activities after drug treatment mainly in the peroxisome-containing fractions. The increase in urate oxidase activity and its subcellular distribution suggest that the tested drugs induce core-containing peroxisomes. The findings are similar to those previously reported with low doses of peroxisome-proliferating hypolipidemic drugs and with acetylsalicylic acid, a drug which is structurally similar to nicotinic acid. Since cholestyramine is not absorbed, its influence on hepatic enzymes probably occurs indirectly as a consequence of enhanced catabolism of cholesterol.
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