Journal of Lipid Research (Aug 1981)

The effect of decreased plasma cholesterol concentration on circulatinga mevalonate metabolism in rats.

  • K R Feingold,
  • M H Wiley,
  • G MacRae,
  • M D Siperstein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 6
pp. 990 – 997

Abstract

Read online

Circulating mevalonate is metabolized by two mechanisms: the sterol pathways leading to cholesterol and the shunt pathway resulting in CO2 production. The kidney is the chief site of circulating mevalonate metabolism by both pathways. The present study investigated the effect of plasma cholesterol concentration on circulating mevalonate metabolism. 3-Aminopyrazolo(3,4-d)pyrimidine and Triton WR 1339 were utilized to induce ''functional hypocholesterolemia''. An enhancement of both renal total nonsaponifiable lipid synthesis (36-43%) and cholesterol synthesis (42%) from circulatinga mevalonate was observed when ''functional hypocholesterolemia'' was induced by either compound. Hepatic total nonsaponifiable lipid synthesis from circulating mevalonate was not enhanced in the Triton-treated animals, but 4-aminopyrazolo(3,4-d)pyrimidine treatment increased accumulation of total labeled nonsaponifiable lipids and cholesterol. No increase in labeled total nonsaponifiable lipids or cholesterol in the carcass was observed after treatment with wither compound. ''Functional hypocholesterolemia'' reduced the shunt pathway of circulating mevalonate metabolism by approximately 30%. This reduction occurred in both the renal and extrarenal shunt pathways. These data indicate that plasma cholesterol concentration regulates the in vivo metabolism of circulating mevalonate in that hypocholesterolemia reduces the shunt pathway and stimulates sterologenesis, and effect chiefly localized to athe kidneys.