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Title: Effect of dietary tomatine on cholesterol metabolism in the rat. Author: Cayen MN. Journal: J Lipid Res; 1971 Jul; 12(4):482-90. PubMed ID: 4362143. Abstract: Tomatine is a virtually nonabsorbable saponin which has been used as an antifungal agent and analytically as a cholesterol precipitant. It was used in this study to determine whether or not it can form a complex with cholesterol in vivo in the rat intestine and what effects such complex formation would have on cholesterol metabolism. Rats that were fed tomatine as 1% of the diet had a decreased uptake of dietary cholesterol by the liver, an increased rate of hepatic and intestinal cholesterol synthesis as well as a partial offsetting of the dietary cholesterol-induced decrease in hepatic cholesterogenesis, and an apparent increase in sterol excretion without an effect on bile acid excretion. In vitro, tomatine did not sequester cholic acid as did cholestyramine. The results show that tomatine has an effect on cholesterol absorption and on other aspects of lipid metabolism in the rat similar to that of cholestyramine, with the notable exception that tomatine increased sterol excretion while cholestyramine increased bile acid excretion. It was suggested that tomatine forms a nonabsorbable complex with cholesterol in the rat intestine.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]