Abstract

Rats fed a high-cholesterol semipurified diet containing casein developed higher levels of serum cholesterol than soy-fed animals. The hypercholesterolaemia of casein-fed rats was due to accumulation of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), as measured by increased concentrations of serum VLDL cholesterol, protein and apoprotein B. High density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol was similar for the two dietary groups. Cholesterol absorption, as measured by the dual isotope ratio method and by direct measurement of cholesterol secretion into thoracic duct lymph, did not differ between the two groups. Cholesterol kinetics were derived from plasma cholesterol specific radioactivity curves and the casein-fed rats had a similar rate of plasma cholesterol production, but a significantly lower plasma cholesterol fractional catabolic rate (FCR) compared with the soy-fed rats. Kinetics of plasma VLDL apoprotein B, derived from analysis of reinjected 125I-labelled VLDL protein, also showed a lower fractional catabolic rate with casein feeding, This suggests that the accumulation of VLDL in the plasma of rats fed dietary casein is not due to excess VLDL production but to deficient VLDL removal. The hypercholesterolaemia appears to be a consequence of diminished VLDL catabolism.

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