Abstract

AbstractSoybean protein and casein supplemented with 1% Arg were compared for their ability to prevent fatty livers caused by excess dietary Lys. The concentrations of serum lipids and lipoproteins of rats fed 5% Lys and having vatty livers were also compared with those of rats fed the identical diet but lacking fatty livers when killed. The total liver lipids, triglycerides and cholesterol of rats fed 15% casein +5% Lys were 3.9, 12.4 and 2 times control values, respectively. Rats fed 5% Lys +1% Arg or 5% Lys with 15% soybean protein had liver lipid concentrations similar to controls fed no supplemental Lys. Serum total lipids, triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipids and free fatty acids also did not change, and serum ketone bodies were slightly elevated with Lys feeding whether the rats had fatty livers or not. The concentrations of circulating HDL were slightly depressed in all rats fed 5% Lys while LDL were significantly elevated, particularly in rats without fatty livers. Serum VLDL did not change with 5% dietary Lys. Overall, excessive dietary Lys caused fatty livers which were prevented by varying the diet or length of feeding. Excess Lys feeding altered lipoprotein metabolism shown by decreased serum HDL and a substantial elevation in LDL. The latter was more apparent when the fat accumulation in liver was less severe or absent. The data suggest that the fatty liver from Lys excess is probably unrelated to increased fat mobilization from storage, decreased fat oxidation or to a major block in the transport of triglycerides from the liver to the circulation.

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