Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-959625
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York
Inhibition of Lipid Synthesis and Secretion in Long-Term Cultures of Adult Rat Hepatocytes by α-Asarone
Publication History
1992
1992
Publication Date:
04 January 2007 (online)
Abstract
In this work we studied the effect of α-asarone, a hypolipidemic active principle of Guatteria gaumeri Greenman, on hepatic lipid metabolism using adult rat hepatocytes cultured on a feeder layer of 3T3 cells. These cultures synthesize and secrete for at least two weeks various lipids from [14 C]-acetic and [14 C]-oleic acid. Exposure for one or two weeks to 10 µg/ml of α-asarone decreased the secretion of various lipids to the culture medium; triacylglycerol secretion was inhibited by 80-97%, phospholipid secretion by 70-87%, cholesterol by 64-70%, and cholesterol esters by 50-92%. The incorporation of [14 C]-acetic acid into cellular lipids decreased by 30-81% and that of [14 C]-oleic acid into phospholipids by 25-47% whereas the incorporation of [14 C]-oleic acid into triglycerides and cholesterol esters increased 3.2 fold and by 28-36%, respectively. Similarly, the activities of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme, marker enzymes of glycerolipid and fatty acid synthesis, decreased by 22-50% and 30-76%, respectively. Our results show that the exposure of the 3T3-hepatocyte cultures to micromolar concentrations of α-asarone significantly inhibits lipid secretion and probably lipid synthesis. They also suggest that at least part of the hypolipidemic effect could be due to a decrease in the secretion of lipids (i.e., lipoproteins) by the hepatocytes.
Key words
α-Asarone - lipid metabolism - cultured hepatocytes