The renal disease, ascites, subcutaneous edema, and hyperlipemia induced in rats by injection of rabbit anti-rat kidney serum comprise a syndrome which closely resembles the nephrotic state as it occurs in humans (1). This provides a unique opportunity to study the mechanism(s) of the disturbed lipid metabolism of the nephrotic state. In previous studies from this laboratory it was found that the hypercholesteremia of nephrotic rats cannot be ascribed either to an increased intestinal absorption of dietary cholesterol (2) or to an increased hepatic synthesis of endogenous cholesterol (3). In the present study the role of exogenous lipids is further assessed, the data showing that the development of experimental nephrotic hyperlipemia and hypercholesteremia is independent of dietary fat.
METHODS AND MATERIALTwenty male rats (Long-Evans strain), were injected intravenously with 0.5 ml. of rabbit anti-rat kidney serum (1) on each of two successive days. Seven of the rats (Group I) were fed a fat and sterol-free ration for five days prior to injection of immune serum, and continued to ingest this ration. Eight rats were fed stock laboratory ration (Group II) and five others (Group III) ingested stock ration supplemented with cholesterol (2 per cent of the diet) and cholic acid (1 per cent of the diet). The cholesterol and cholic acid-supplemented diet also was fed to six normal rats (Group IV) which were not injected with anti-kidney serum. A fifth group of ten other control rats (Group V) were fed stock ration.Each rat was bled from the tail six days after the injection of immune serum, and assay made according to previously described methods of the plasma concentrations of total cholesterol (4) and total lipids (5). Four days later similar determinations again were made in the rats ingesting stock ration (I) and the fat-sterol-free diet (II).X Aided by grants from the American Heart Association and research grant A-46 from the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Public Health Service.
RESULTSSix days after the administration of immune serum all of the injected rats exhibited ascites, and lipemic-turbidity of their plasma. Table I presents the averages and ranges of plasma total lipids and total cholesterol values obtained from the nephrotic rats fed stock ration (Group II), those fed the diet free of fats and sterols (Group I), and the normal rats fed stock ration (Group V). The data show that the rats fed the fat-sterol-free diet developed a degree of hyperlipemia and hypercholesteremia equal to, or slightly greater than that developed by the nephrotic animals ingesting stock ration. The nephrotic rats of both groups exhibited a similar degree of ascites, subcutaneous edema, and grossly apparent turbidity of the plasma samples.The ingestion of a ration containing excess cholesterol and cholic acid has been shown to induce chronic hypercholesteremia in rats (6, 7), due to the increased intestinal absorption of cholesterol effected by simultaneous administration of...