Abstract

AbstractThe effect of the concentration and structure of dietary sterol on its uptake and distribution in the intestine, hemolymph and fat body was studied in sixth‐instar larvae of Heliothis zea. When cholesterol (cholest‐5‐en‐3β‐ol) was inoculated per os into the foregut of larvae, it was rapidly taken up by the intestine. Some of the dietary sterol then passed into the hemolymph, primarily via the midgut, during at least the first 9 h after inoculation, while at least 7% of the dose remained associated with the intestine. The amount of dietary sterol per 0.10 g of hemolymph increased until it reached 3–6% of the dose after 9 h. The amount of sterol per 0.10 g of the fat body increased to as much as 5% of the dose after 10 h. As the concentration of sterol in the dose increased from 0.3 to 15 μg/4 μl, the amount of sterol associated with the intestine, hemolymph, and fat body also increased. When cholesterol was inoculated intrahemocoelically, instead of per os, the amount of sterol in the hemolymph decreased, for at least the first 8 h after inoculation, and may have been absorbed, at least in part, by the intestine. The absence of a double bond in cholestanol (5α‐cholestan‐3β‐ol) had no significant effect, at least 5 h after inoculation, on the uptake and distribution of this sterol in the intestine, hemolymph, and fat body of the larva. The results of this study indicate that although larvae of H. zea fed cholestanol have a slower rate of growth than those fed cholesterol, this may be due to differences in the utilization of the two sterols rather than to differences in their uptake by the tissues.

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