Abstract
7-Ketocholesterol is a major dietary oxysterol and the predominant non-enzymically formed oxysterol in human atherosclerotic plaque. We tested the hypothesis that 7-ketocholesterol is preferentially retained by tissues relative to cholesterol in vivo. To ensure rapid tissue uptake, acetylated low density lipoprotein, labeled with esters of [(14)C]-7-ketocholesterol and [(3)H]cholesterol, was injected into rats via a jugular catheter. At timed intervals (2 min to 24 h) rats (n = 48 total) were exsanguinated and tissues were dissected and assayed for radioactivity. In two experiments the majority of both radiolabels appeared in the liver after 2 min. In all tissues, (14)C appeared transiently and did not accumulate. Rather, it was metabolized in the liver and excreted into the intestine mainly as aqueous-soluble metabolites (presumably bile acids). By 9 h, (14)C in the liver had decreased to 10% of the injected dose while 36% was present in the intestine. In contrast, at 9 h 38% of (3)H was evident in the liver while only 5% was found in the intestine. Unlike [(3)H]cholesterol, little (14)C was found to re-enter the circulation, indicating that enterohepatic recycling of 7-ketocholesterol was negligible. This is the first report of the distribution of an oxysterol relative to cholesterol, administered simultaneously, in a whole animal model. The finding that [(14)C]-7-ketocholesterol is rapidly metabolized and excreted by the liver suggests that diet may not be a major source of oxysterols in atherosclerotic plaque, and that perhaps dietary oxysterols make little or no contribution to atherogenesis.
Published Version
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