| Literature DB >> 1619468 |
G E Mott1, E M Jackson, C A McMahan, H C McGill.
Abstract
This study was designed to determine the differences in cholesterol metabolism due to dietary cholesterol and type of fat in adult baboons. From weaning at 16 wk to 7-8 y of age, 80 baboons were fed one of four diets: high cholesterol (0.24 mg/kJ) or low cholesterol (0.0024 mg/kJ) with 40% of energy from saturated fat [polyunsaturated/saturated fatty acid ratio (P/S) = 0.37] or unsaturated fat (P/S = 2.1). High cholesterol and saturated fat independently raised serum lipoprotein and apolipoprotein concentrations to about the same extent. The liver cholesterol concentration of baboons fed high cholesterol diets was 23% higher than that of baboons fed low cholesterol. High dietary cholesterol also increased bile cholesterol concentration by 25%, the neutral steroid excretion rate by 66% and the bile acid excretion rate by 30%. With feeding of saturated fat, compared with unsaturated fat, liver cholesterol was 24% lower, bile cholesterol 26% lower and the neutral steroid excretion rate 12% lower. Dietary cholesterol greatly suppressed whole-body cholesterol synthesis, but type of fat did not affect cholesterol synthesis rate. These results suggest that dietary cholesterol and saturated fat increase plasma lipoprotein concentrations through different physiological mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1619468 DOI: 10.1093/jn/122.7.1397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr ISSN: 0022-3166 Impact factor: 4.798