Abstract

The development of the chick embryo was characterised by the accumulation of large droplets of lipid in the cytoplasm of the embryonic liver, as revealed by electron microscopy. Analysis of the lipid composition of the livers indicated that this accumulation resulted from a dramatic increase in the cholesteryl ester content of the tissue during the the latter part of the embryonic period. This lipid is apparently derived from yolk cholesterol and may be taken up by the liver in the form of lipoprotein remnants. Significant levels of acyl-CoA : cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) activity were expressed in the liver throughout the second half of the developmental period, and this activity was maximal at the time when lipid transfer from the yolk was most intensive. The activity of microsomal cholesterol ester hydrolase (CEH) was very low throughout development, and no CEH activity was detected in the cytosolic fraction. In addition, substantial amounts of a cytosolic protein which inhibits CEH activity were present. Thus the relative activities of these enzymic systems are consistent with the net accumulation of cholesteryl ester which occurs in the liver during development.

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