Literature DB >> 11333839

Dietary cholesterol is secreted in intestinally derived chylomicrons during several subsequent postprandial phases in healthy humans.

G Beaumier-Gallon1, C Dubois, M Senft, M F Vergnes, A M Pauli, H Portugal, D Lairon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The process of intestinal absorption and chylomicron resecretion of dietary cholesterol in humans is poorly understood.
OBJECTIVE: The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that dietary cholesterol ingested during a given meal is resecreted into chylomicrons (and plasma) during several subsequent postprandial periods.
DESIGN: Seven healthy subjects ingested 3 comparable mixed test meals (at 0, 8, and 24 h) containing a given amount of fat (49 g) and cholesterol (157 mg); blood samples were taken 3 and 6 h after each test meal and 48 and 72 h after the beginning of the experiment. Heptadeuterated dietary cholesterol was present in the first test meal only, enabling its specific determination with use of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Chylomicrons, LDL, and HDL were isolated and lipids were quantified.
RESULTS: In apolipoprotein B-48-containing chylomicrons, deuterated cholesterol concentrations were moderate after the first meal (1.3 x 10(-4) mmol/L), reached a maximum after the second meal (2.4 x 10(-4) mmol/L), and were still elevated after the third meal (1.7 x 10(-4) mmol/L). In plasma, LDL and HDL cholesterol enrichment in deuterated cholesterol was lower than in chylomicrons and plateaued after 24--48 h. Estimates of newly secreted exogenous deuterated cholesterol in chylomicrons indicate that 30.7%, 55.2%, and 14.1% of the total was secreted after the first, second, and third meals, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Ingested dietary cholesterol is secreted by the small intestine in chylomicrons into the circulation during > or =3 subsequent postprandial periods in healthy humans. This likely results from a complex multistep intestinal processing of cholesterol with dietary fat as a driving force.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11333839     DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/73.5.870

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0002-9165            Impact factor:   7.045


  9 in total

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