Origin of fatty acids of cholesteryl ester accumulated by Fu5AH cells in culture

Abstract
The Fu5AH rat hepatoma cell line accumulates cholesteryl ester (CE) upon incubation in medium supplemented with hyperlipemic serum or hyperlipemic serum lipoproteins. This cell line was used to investigate the origin of the fatty acids esterified to cholesterol in intracellular accumulations of CE. The intracellular CE-fatty acid distribution was found to be markedly different from that of the lipoprotein which stimulated the accumulation. Free fatty acids added to the culture medium were found esterified to cholesterol in the cells, demonstrating that cellular esterification contributes to the accumulation of CE. Using a subline of Fu5AH cells containing radioactively labeled intracellular fatty acids, it was found that about one-third of the fatty acid moiety of CE accumulated by the cells during a 24 hr incubation with hyperlipemic serum was derived from endogenous fatty acids. The drug chloroquine was found to inhibit cellular cholesterol esterification, so that only 4% of CE-fatty acids were derived from endogenous fatty acids. Evidence is presented suggesting a major role for cellular esterification in CE accumulation by Fu5AH cells.

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