Abstract

This study evaluated the ability of alpha1-adrenergic blockade to interfere with the development of diet-induced hyperlipidemia and deterioration of insulin action. Diets having extremely divergent effects on glucose and lipid metabolism were contrasted. Rats were fed for 4 weeks either a nonpurified diet (chow) or a hyperlipidemic (HL) purified diet containing 40% energy as sucrose, 40% as fat, and 20% as casein. Half of each dietary cohort was given the alpha1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin (3 mg/kg/day in the food). Blood was collected in the fasted state (10 h after food removal) and 2 h after the intake of a meal. In the fasted state, plasma triacylglycerols (TGs) were higher in rats fed the HL diet than in those given chow and were not affected by long-term treatment with prazosin. Postprandially, plasma TG increased twofold in the chow-fed group, with or without long-term prazosin. In contrast, prazosin reduced by more than half the eightfold increase in TG that followed intake of the high-fat meal (Diet x Blocker interaction; p < 0.002) in the HL cohort. The HL-fed animals also displayed fasting hypercholesterolemia (+30%; p < 0.0001), which was prevented by long-term treatment with prazosin. Likewise, the 50% increase in plasma cholesterol that followed meal ingestion only in the HL cohort was blunted by the alpha1-blocker (Diet x Blocker interaction; p < 0.001). Long-term prazosin also abolished fasting hyperinsulinemia in the HL cohort, whereas it did not alter fasting insulin in chow-fed animals (Diet x Blocker interaction; p < 0.005). Measurement of postprandial lipoprotein lipase activity in several tissues did not suggest the involvement of changes in the absolute availability of the enzyme as a determinant of the hypotriacylglycerolemic action of the alpha1-blocker. Thus long-term alpha1-adrenergic blockade, with minimal effects in rats fed a hypolipidemic diet, strongly attenuates several of the fasting and postprandial alterations in plasma variables of lipid and glucose metabolism induced by an extremely lipogenic diet.

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