Abstract
Summary
Effects of cholic acid on biosynthesis of hepatic cholesterol and bile acids were studied. Mice maintained on a basal diet, or this diet supplemented with 0.5% cholic acid, received single intraperitoneal injections of mevalonic acid-2-C14 or choles-terol-4-C14. Feces were collected at 24-hour intervals, fecal steroid-C14 was isolated and fractionated, α + β-sterol-C14 and bile acid-C14 were determined. In control mice the distribution of C14 activity in fecal steroids was 60% in the sterol fraction and 40% in the bile acid fraction. This ratio was constant with time after the first 24-hour interval, regardless of the substance injected. It was shown that cholic acid brings about equal decreases in the rates of both hepatic cholesterol and bile acid biosyntheses. Since a preceding study had shown that the rate of bile acid synthesis in mouse liver is inhibited by cholic acid independently of its effect on cholesterol synthesis, it was concluded that the rate of hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis in mice is controlled by cholic acid and its conjugates by means of a double feedback reaction.
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