SUMMARY1. The uptake, esterification and transport of [l4C]oleic acid were studied using sacs of rat everted small intestine incubated in 25 ml. of a buffered mixture of sodium taurocholate, glyceryl mono-oleate and 14C-labelled oleic acid in micellar form.
SUMMARY1. Sacs 20 cm long were obtained from the upper half of the small intestine of bile fistula rats (bile duct cannulated 48 hours previously). The sacs were everted, filled with oxygenated phosphate buffer and incubated 1 hr at 37"Cin 25 ml. of a buffered micellar solution of oleic acid (0.6 mM), mono-olein (0.3 mM), sodium taurocholate (4.8 mM) and 3H-labelled cholesterol (0-15 mM) plus glucose (28 mM 3. Adding 3 ml. whole rate bile with other factors unchanged caused cholesterol uptake to decrease by 50 % in confirmation of previous studies.4. Adding purified lecithin obtained from rat liver tissue, and from egg yolks, similarly decreased cholesterol uptake. A significant response was obtained with 2-5 mg liver lecithin (concentration 0-13 mM) and a near maximum response with 15 mg (concentration 0-80 mM). 10 mg lecithin decreased uptake by an amount equivalent to that obtained with 3 ml. whole bile.5. Lecithin is an active component of whole bile causing reduced intestinal cholesterol uptake from micelles.6. The decreased uptake of cholesterol in the presence of lecithin may have been the result of expansion of the cholesterol-containing micelles with consequent reduction in cholesterol permeability.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.