Abstract

The activity of four lysosomal enzymes have been examined in liver cytoplasmic extract from guinea pigs fed three different diets: a) an ordinary diet, low in fat, high in carbohydrates; b) a semisynthetic diet containing 10% cottonseed oil (by weight) without and c) with 1% cholesterol. The cholesterol content in the liver was similar in control-fed and fat-fed animals, while there was a 10-fold increase in cholesterol + fat-fed animals, and most of this cholesterol was present as ester. We observed increased activity of beta-glucuronidase, beta-acetyl-glucosaminidase and cathepsin D during fat cholesterol feeding (diet c) while the activity of acid phosphatase decreased compared to control-fed animals. These findings probably mirror the increased hepatic accumulation of lipids and lipoproteins observed in cholesterol + fat-fed guinea pigs.

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