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. 1987 Feb;63(2-3):239-49.
doi: 10.1016/0021-9150(87)90127-4.

Esterases in inbred strains of mice with differential cholesterolemic responses to a high-cholesterol diet

Esterases in inbred strains of mice with differential cholesterolemic responses to a high-cholesterol diet

A C Beynen et al. Atherosclerosis. 1987 Feb.

Abstract

Specific esterase isoenzyme patterns in plasma may be associated with responsiveness of serum cholesterol to dietary cholesterol. In rabbits and rats the presence and absence of a high-mobility, anodal esterase band on electrophoresis have been shown to be associated with hypo- and hyperresponsiveness, respectively. We fed for 28 days male mice of 7 inbred strains either a low-cholesterol, commercial diet or a diet containing 2% (w/w) cholesterol, 0.5% cholic acid and 5% olive oil. Feeding the high-cholesterol diet revealed marked inter-strain differences in the responses of plasma and liver cholesterol; the increases ranged from 21 to 129% and from 10 to 80-fold, respectively. There was no association between esterase isoenzyme patterns in plasma and the sensitivity to the high-cholesterol diet. The mean baseline plasma total esterase activity tended to be positively associated with the absolute response of plasma cholesterol to the high-cholesterol diet (r = 0.56; n = 7), but the positive relationship between the baseline concentration of the ES-1 component in plasma and the cholesterolemic response was stronger (r = 0.84; n = 7; P less than 0.05). The high-cholesterol diet caused a significant increase in plasma total esterase activities in 6 out of the 7 strains. Evidence is presented that the increase in plasma total esterase activity, which was associated with an increase in the activity and concentration of the so-called ES-2 isoenzyme, is the result of an enhanced release of esterases from the intestine, rather than from the liver. A significant, positive correlation was found between the baseline intestinal esterase activity and the cholesterolemic response after cholesterol feeding (r = 0.83; n = 7; P less than 0.05).

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