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Mechanism of zone-specific hepatic steatosis caused by valproate: inhibition of ketogenesis in periportal regions of the liver lobule

MJ Olson, JA Handler and RG Thurman

Microvacuolar steatosis in periportal regions of the liver lobule was produced by injection of fasted rats with a single dose of valproate (500 mg/kg, subcutaneously). In livers perfused in the absence of exogenous fatty acids, ketone body (acetoacetate + beta- hydroxybutyrate) production was decreased by valproate (500 microM) maximally by 67%. Concomitantly, NADH fluorescence detected from the liver surface declined about 30% with a time course similar to that of the inhibition of ketogenesis. Valproate had little effect on oxygen uptake but caused an elevation of the steady state level of catalase- H2O2 corresponding to an increase in H2O2 production of about 6 mumol/g/hr. In addition, valproate decreased the rate of oxidized glutathione release into bile by 45% but had little effect on bile flow. In the presence of oleate (250 microM), valproate inhibited ketone body production by 46% and decreased NADH fluorescence by 39%. Rates of ketogenesis in periportal and pericentral regions of the liver lobule were calculated from changes in NADH fluorescence detected with micro-light guides during infusion of valproate in the presence and absence of fatty acids. In the absence of valproate, endogenous ketogenesis was about 35 mumol/g/hr in both regions of the liver lobule. In the presence of oleate, however, rates were significantly higher in pericentral regions (89 +/- 2 mumol/g/hr) than in periportal areas (71 +/- 3 mumol/g/hr). In the presence of added oleate, valproate decreased rates of ketogenesis to 34 +/- 4 mumol/g/hr in periportal regions and 51 +/- 3 mumol/g/hr in pericentral areas. We conclude, therefore, that fat accumulates in periportal areas because valproate depresses ketogenesis to a greater extent in hepatocytes localized around the portal triad.

Volume 30, Issue 6, pp. 520-525, 12/01/1986
Copyright © 1986 by American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics




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Copyright © 1986 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics