Abstract
Summary
Male Wistar rats were fed 0.3% N-cyclohexyl linoleamide (Clinolamide; Linolexamide) for 21 days. In a series of 5 experiments it was found that the drug did not significantly affect serum, liver, or kidney cholesterol levels. The livers of the Clinolamide-fed rats were larger (% body weight) than those of the controls. The serum plus liver cholesterol pool was generally higher in the control animals as was skin cholesterol. Synthesis of cholesterol from either sodium acetate-1-14C or mevalonic acid-2-14C by liver slices of rats fed 0.3% Clinolamide was not affected. Liver slices from rats fed 0.6% of the test compound synthesized significantly less cholesterol from either substrate than did slices from control rats. Addition of N-cyclohexyl linoleamide (1.5 × 10-5 M) to normal rat liver slices significantly depressed cholesterol synthesis from acetate-1-14C. Liver mitochondrial preparations from rats fed 0.3% of Clinolamide do not oxidize significantly more cholesterol-26-14C to 14CO2 than do similar preparations from control rats.
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