Abstract
The uptake and metabolism of [1- 14C]oleate (0.3 mmol/L) were studied in isolated hepatocytes from lean and obese Zucker rats fed either a control (low-fat) diet or a high-fat diet. With the control diet, [1- 14C]oleate uptake was increased by 70% in the obese rats, and fat-feeding decreased this uptake to values comparable to that of their lean littermates. Interestingly, the hepatocyte mean surface area was increased in the obese mutants by 21% with the control diet and by 30% with the high-fat diet. The possible reasons for the differences in oleate uptake are discussed. With the control diet, cells from the obese rats showed a four-fold rise in [1- 14C]oleate esterification, while ketogenesis (β-hydroxybutyrate + acetoacetate production) as well as the radioactive acid-soluble products were greatly depressed. Production of CO 2 was very low and similar in both groups of animals. Adaptation to the high-fat diet in the obese rats resulted in a reversal between esterification and oxidation of oleate: the latter became the major metabolic pathway as in the lean rats. The ketogenic capacity was greatly if not completely restored. In the lean animals, glucagon stimulated ketogenesis both in the presence or absence of oleate and decreased [1- 14C]oleate esterification. In the obese rats, the hormone exerted a significant ketogenic effect only if oleate was present and did not influence its esterification. The data demonstrate the following abnormalities in the hepatocytes of obese Zucker rats: (1) an enlargement of cell size, (2) an increased oleate uptake, (3) a virtual absence of a ketogenic response to exogenous oleate, and (4) a markedly increased esterification of the latter. The metabolic defects, but not the cell size, appear to be largely corrected by an adaptation to a high-fat diet. The hepatic response to glucagon was decreased in the obese rats at the level of endogenous ketogenesis.
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