Hepatic 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase activity in hamsters given a fat-free high-glucose diet for 21 days was approximately 20 times higher than that in chow-fed hamsters. The increase in enzyme activity by dietary glucose was affected by saturated or unsaturated fatty acids or cholesterol added to the high-glucose diet. Ethyllinoleate or ethyloleate, added to the diet at a concentration of 5%, suppressed the increase in the enzyme activity. In contrast, addition of ethylpalmitate to the diet further stimulated the increase in the enzyme activity. Addition of 2% cholesterol to the high-glucose diet moderately suppressed, and addition of both cholesterol and ethyllinoleate completely prevented, the increase in the enzyme activity. The enzyme activity closely correlated with the incidence of formation of cholesterol gallstones but not with the liver cholesterol level. Marked increase in the enzyme activity was observed by feeding the high-glucose diet to starved hamsters for even a short period. On the third day after feeding was resumed, the enzyme activity was increased 500-fold compared to that during starvation. This increase in the enzyme activity was also reduced by dietary unsaturated fatty acid esters and stimulated by a dietary saturated fatty acid ester. © 1979.