Effects of long-term administration of clofibric acid on peroxisomal beta-oxidation, fatty acid-binding protein and cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA hydrolases in rat liver
- PMID: 2857564
- DOI: 10.1016/0006-2952(85)90039-5
Effects of long-term administration of clofibric acid on peroxisomal beta-oxidation, fatty acid-binding protein and cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA hydrolases in rat liver
Abstract
Long-term effects of rho-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid (clofibric acid) on inductions of peroxisomal beta-oxidation, fatty acid-binding protein and cytosolic acyl-CoA hydrolases in rat liver were studied. Male rats were fed clofibric acid at a dietary concentration of 0.25% for 22 weeks. The induction of peroxisomal beta-oxidation activity lasted throughout the long-term treatment of rats, the activity being a half that of rats treated with clofibric acid for 2 weeks. cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA hydrolase I and II were both induced by the long-term and the short-term treatment of age-matched rats with clofibric acid, although the ability to induce hydrolase I decreased greatly by aging of rats. There was little difference in the inducing effect on fatty acid-binding protein between the long-term treatment and the short-term treatment. These results suggest that the inductions of peroxisomal beta-oxidation, fatty acid-binding protein and two cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA hydrolases are essential responses of rats to clofibric acid (but not the brief events which occur in only the first stage of the continuous treatment with clofibric acid).
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