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Environmental physiology & biochemistry 1975

Effect of excess and deficiency of vitamin A on the utilization of FFA by liver and skeletal muscle.

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C K Ramachandran
K N Dileepan
V Singh
T A Venkitasubramanian

Keywords

Abstract

Fatty acid metabolism in liver and skeletal muscle has been studied in rats treated with high doses of vitamin A and in those made vitamin A-deficient. Ingestion of 30,000 IU of vitamin A for two days resulted in increased incorporation of palmitate-1-14C into triglycerides but not into phospholipids. Accumulation of hepatic triglycerides was observed in vitamin A-fed rats. Deficiency of vitamin A did not cause any change in the triglyceride or phospholipid content of the liver. The rate of hepatic fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis was markedly increased in vitamin A-fed rats. The experimental evidence indicated that vitamin A may have a stimulatory effect on these processes apart from that exerted by the high plasma FFA level in vitamin A-fed rats. Oxidation of palmitate-1-14C into C32 by skeletal muscle (latissimus dorsi) was also increased as a result of vitamin A administration. Vitamin A deficiency did not cause any change in fatty acid oxidation by liver and skeletal muscle. Hepatic palmitoyl-CoA synthetase activity was decreased in vitamin A-deficient rats. The results presented suggest that vitamin A may be required for the uptake and utilization of fatty acids by liver and akeletal muscle.

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