Effects of dehydroepiandrosterone and carnitine treatment on rat liver.

Biochem Mol Biol Int

Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche--Sezione di Patologia generale, Università di Modena, Italia.

Published: August 1994

It is well established that DHEA treatment is associated in the rat to an increase in fatty acids metabolism. This condition would require levels of L-carnitine much higher than those physiologically present in the liver. The possibility thus exist that during DHEA treatment the concentration of L-carnitine may become a limiting factor for fatty acids oxidation and therefore responsible of some of the effects observed after administration of the hormone. The present experiments were designed to test this hypothesis. The results show that the increase in the levels of peroxisomal enzymes induced in hepatocytes by DHEA, is greatly reduced by parallel administration of L-carnitine. Furthermore, L-carnitine administration counteracts the effect of DHEA on mitochondrial structure. On the contrary, carnitine has no significant effect on the reduction in weight gain observed upon short- or long-term treatment with DHEA.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dhea treatment
8
fatty acids
8
dhea
5
effects dehydroepiandrosterone
4
dehydroepiandrosterone carnitine
4
treatment
4
carnitine treatment
4
treatment rat
4
rat liver
4
liver well
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!