Journal of Lipid Research (May 1977)
The lecithin–cholesterol acyl transferase activity of rat intestinal lymph
Abstract
The lecithin-cholesterol acyl transferase (LCAT) activity in rat mesenteric lymph was examined as a possible source of chylomicron cholesteryl ester. Lymph activity was only 2–3% of rat serum activity. Removal of d < 1.006 lipoproteins increased lymph LCAT activity, but only to 6–8% of that of serum. Relative to total cholesterol in the d < 1.08 g/ml fractions, lymph LCAT activity in lymph from fasting rats was less than serum, but in lymph from nonfasting rats the ratio LCAT/HDL-cholesterol reached levels greater than serum, suggesting a contribution of enzyme from the gut. Both LCAT activity and HDL concentration in mesenteric lymph increased during feeding.Subfractions of lymph that inhibited serum LCAT were: chylomicrons, VLDL, chylomicron lipid, VLDL apoprotein, and HDL apoprotein. In the rat, the low LCAT activity of mesenteric lymph was in part due to the low enzyme concentration present, and the activity was apparently lowered further by lipid-rich lipoproteins that inhibited the reaction. Enzyme inhibition due to the apoprotein fractions of lipoproteins is probably minor in the rat in vivo.