Abstract

Rats vary in their propensity to become obese when eating a high-fat diet, but the factors that make some rats susceptible and others resistant to diet-induced obesity are unclear. Recent studies show that rats predisposed to diet-induced obesity have a preexisting deficit in fat oxidation and suggest that this impairment is due in part to reduced fatty acid oxidation in liver. To determine directly whether rats susceptible to diet-induced obesity are less able to oxidize fatty acids in liver, we measured palmitate oxidation in hepatocytes isolated from outbred Sprague-Dawley rats that were identified while still eating a low-fat diet as obesity-prone or obesity-resistant by using a new screening procedure based on the change in plasma triglyceride concentration produced by an intragastric load of a fat and carbohydrate mixture. The results showed that hepatocytes from rats thus identified as obesity-prone oxidized 44% less palmitate in vitro than did those from obesity-resistant rats. This difference in hepatocyte fatty acid oxidation is consistent with and may explain at least in part the reduced capacity of obesity-prone rats to oxidize fat.

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