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1.
A study was undertaken to determine the relative association of lipid and apolipoproteins among lipoproteins produced during lipolysis of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) in perfused rat heart. Human VLDL was perfused through beating rat hearts along with various combinations of albumin (0.5%), HDL2, the infranatant of d greater than 1.08 g/ml of serum, and labeled sucrose. The products were resolved by gel filtration, ultracentrifugation, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The composition of the lipoprotein products was assessed by analysis of total lipid profiles by gas-liquid chromatography and immunoassay of apolipoproteins. A vesicle particle, which trapped and retained 1-2% of medium sucrose, co-isolated with VLDL and VLDL remnants by gel filtration chromatography but primarily with the low density lipoprotein (LDL) fraction when isolated by ultracentrifugation. The vesicle was resolved from apoB-containing LDL lipolysis products by hydroxylapatite chromatography of the lipoproteins. The vesicle lipoprotein contained unesterified cholesterol (34%), phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin (50%), cholesteryl ester (6%), triacylglycerol (5%), and apolipoprotein (5%). The apolipoprotein consisted of apoC-II (7%), apoC-III (93%), and trace amounts of apoE (1%). When viewed by electron microscopy the vesicles appeared as rouleaux structures with a diameter of 453 A, and a periodicity of 51.7 A. The mass represented by the vesicle particle in terms of the initial amount in VLDL was: cholesterol (5%), phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin (3%), apoC-II (0.5%), apoC-III (2.2%). The majority of the apoC and E released from apoB-containing lipoproteins was associated with neutral-lipid core lipoproteins proteins which possessed size characteristics of HDL. The vesicles were also formed in the presence of HDL and serum and were not disrupted by serum HDL. It is concluded that lipolysis of VLDL in vitro results in the production of VLDL remnants and LDL apoB-containing lipoproteins, as well as HDL-like lipoproteins. A vesicular lipoprotein which has many characteristics of lipoprotein X found in cholestasis, lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency, and during Intralipid infusion is also formed. The majority of apolipoprotein C and E released from apoB-containing lipoproteins is associated with the HDL-like lipoprotein. It is suggested that the formation and stability of the vesicle lipoprotein may be related to the high ratio of cholesterol/phospholipid in this particle.  相似文献   

2.
Human very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) have been separated into two discrete subfractions by heparin-Sepharose chromatography. The retained fraction relative to the unretained fraction is characterized by an increased cholesterol ester/triacylglycerol ratio and an increased ratio of apolipoprotein E relative to apolipoprotein C. We have subfractionated VLDL from type IV hyperlipoproteinemic subjects and characterized these subfractions with respect to (i) composition and (ii) the metabolic fate of apolipoprotein B of each subfraction. The unretained fraction accounted for an average of 42% of total VLDL in type IV subjects. A similar distribution was obtained with VLDL from Type III subjects; however, only 25% of normal VLDL is in the unretained fraction. The apolipoprotein E/apolipoprotein C ratio was 2-8-fold higher in the retained fraction. The distribution of apolipoprotein E isomorphs and the individual C apolipoproteins were similar in each fraction. Retained and unretained fractions were labelled with 125I and/or 131I and injected simultaneously into miniature pigs. Apolipoprotein B of retained fractions was catabolized at a greater rate (fractional catabolic rate = 0.98 h-1 vs. 0.54 h-1, n = 7, P less than 0.05) compared to unretained fractions. These results are consistent with the concept that reduced content of C apolipoproteins in VLDL is correlated with enhanced uptake by perfused rat livers. Apolipoprotein B from retained fractions was converted to intermediate-density lipoproteins (IDL) at a greater rate, and apolipoprotein B from both fractions were converted to low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Although the unretained fraction may be the precursor of the retained fraction, the possibility exists that each fraction is largely synthesized and catabolized independently.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies have shown that very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) from patients with Tangier disease are less effective as a substrate for human milk lipoprotein lipase (LPL) than VLDL from normal controls as assessed by measuring the first order rate constant (k1) of triglyceride hydrolysis. Tangier VLDL also has a higher content of apolipoprotein (apo) A-II than normal VLDL. To explore the possible relationship between the relatively high concentration of apoA-II in VLDL and low k1 values, Tangier VLDL were fractionated on an anti-apoA-II immunosorber. The retained fraction contained a newly identified triglyceride-rich lipoprotein characterized by the presence of apolipoproteins A-II, B, C-I, C-II, C-III, D, and E (LP-A-II:B:C:D:E or LP-A-II:B complex), whereas the unretained fraction consisted of previously identified triglyceride-rich apoB-containing lipoproteins free of apoA-II. In VLDL from patients with Tangier disease or type V hyperlipoproteinemia, the LP-A-II:B complex accounted for 70-90% and 25-70% of the total apoB content, respectively. The LP-A-II:B complexes had similar lipid and apolipoprotein composition; they were poor substrates for LPL as indicated by their low k1 values (0.014-0.016 min-1). In contrast, the apoA-II-free lipoproteins present in unretained fractions were effective substrates for LPL with k1 values equal to or greater than 0.0313 min-1. These results indicate that triglyceride-rich lipoproteins consist of several apoB-containing lipoproteins, including the LP-A-II:B complex, and that lipoprotein particles of similar size and density but distinct apolipoprotein composition also possess distinct metabolic properties.  相似文献   

4.
The hypertriglyceridemia associated with streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats is largely reflected in the plasma lipoproteins of density less than 1.006 g/ml. Analysis of the plasma apolipoproteins of these rats indicated marked alterations in both the total levels and in the lipoprotein distribution of the major apolipoproteins. In whole plasma, diabetes was associated with significant increases in apolipoprotein (apo)-AIV, apo-AI, and apo-B (mainly in the intestinally derived apo-B240) and a marked decrease in apo-E. In the d less than 1.006 g/ml lipoprotein fraction (very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL], there were significant increases in apo-B240, apo-AI, and apo-AIV and decreased levels of apo-E and the C apolipoproteins. The decrease in apo-C was primarily due to lower levels of apo-CII, and the ratio of the lipoprotein lipase inhibitor, apo-CIII, to the lipoprotein lipase activator, apo CII, was significantly increased over that in controls. The comparative clearance of triglycerides of VLDL particles from control and diabetic rat plasma was tested in recirculating heart perfusion in vitro. During 45-min perfusions of hearts from control donor rats, lipolysis of triglycerides of VLDL from diabetic rats was only 63-64% of that using plasma VLDL from control rats. Perfusion of hearts from diabetic rats with VLDL from control rats gave lipolysis values of only 53% of that obtained with normal hearts. Where both the VLDL and hearts were obtained from diabetic rats, lipolysis was 23% of that observed when both the lipoprotein and the organ were from control rats. The data suggest that in addition to depressed lipoprotein lipase activity in the tissue from diabetic rats, there are also major compositional changes in circulating lipoproteins which may contribute to defective triglyceride clearance from the circulation.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this study was to test the use of human hepatocarcinoma HepG2 cells as a model for studying the formation and secretion of human hepatic lipoproteins. To this end, we determined the rate of accumulation and percent composition of neutral lipids and apolipoproteins in the culture medium of HepG2 cells and isolated and partially characterized the apolipoprotein B (ApoB) containing lipoprotein particles. The rates of accumulation in the medium of HepG2 cells, grown in minimum essential medium during a 24-h incubation, of triglycerides, cholesterol, and cholesterol esters expressed as microgram/(g of cell protein X h) were 373 +/- 55, 167 +/- 14, and 79 +/- 10, respectively; the secretion rates for apolipoproteins B, A-I, E, A-II, and C-III were 372 +/- 36, 149 +/- 14, 104 +/- 13, 48 +/- 4, and 13 +/- 1 microgram/(g of cell protein X h), respectively. The major portion of ApoB was present in very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and low-density lipoproteins (LDL) (84%), with the remainder occurring in high-density lipoproteins (HDL) (16%). Approximately 10-13% of ApoA-I and ApoA-II were present in VLDL and LDL, while 60% of ApoE occurred in HDL and 40% in VLDL and LDL. To separate ApoB-containing lipoproteins, secreted lipoproteins were fractionated by either sequential immunoprecipitation or immunoaffinity chromatography with antibodies to ApoB and ApoE. Results showed that 60-70% of ApoB occurred in the culture medium as lipoprotein B (LP-B) and 30-40% as lipoprotein B:E (LP-B:E). Both ApoB-containing lipoproteins represent polydisperse systems of spherical particles ranging in size from 100 to 350 A for LP-B and from 200 to 500 A for LP-B:E. LP-B particles were identified in VLDL, LDL, and HDL, while LP-B:E particles were only present in VLDL and LDL. The major neutral lipid of both ApoB-containing lipoproteins was triglyceride (50-70% of the total neutral lipid content); cholesterol and cholesterol esters were present in equal amounts. The LP-B:E particles contained 70-90% ApoB and 10-30% ApoE. The ApoB was identified in both types of particles as B-100. A time study on the accumulation of ApoB-containing lipoproteins showed that LP-B particles were secreted independently of LP-B:E particles.  相似文献   

6.
Like rat C apolipoproteins, each of the C apolipoproteins from human blood plasma (C-I, C-II, C-III-1, and C-III-2) bound to small chylomicrons from mesenteric lymph of estradiol-treated rats and inhibited their uptake by the isolated perfused rat liver. This inhibitory effect of the C apolipoproteins was independent of apolipoprotein E, which is present only in trace amounts in these chylomicrons. Addition of rat apolipoprotein E to small chylomicrons from mesenteric lymph of normal rats did not displace C apolipoproteins and had no effect on the uptake of these particles by the perfused liver, indicating that an increased ratio of E apolipoproteins to C apolipoproteins on chylomicron particles, unaccompanied by depletion of the latter, may not promote recognition by the chylomicron remnant receptor. The hepatic uptake of remnants of rat hepatic very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and small chylomicrons, which had been produced in functionally eviscerated rats, was also inhibited by addition of C apolipoproteins. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that the addition of all of the C apolipoproteins to newly secreted chylomicrons and VLDL inhibits premature uptake of these particles by the liver and that depletion of all of these apolipoproteins from remnant particles facilitates their hepatic uptake. Remnants of chylomicrons and VLDL incubated with rat C apolipoproteins efficiently took up C-III apolipoproteins, but not apolipoprotein C-II (the activator protein for lipoprotein lipase). Preferential loss of apolipoprotein C-II during remnant formation may regulate the termination of triglyceride hydrolysis prior to complete removal of triglycerides from chylomicrons and VLDL.  相似文献   

7.
The capacity of the isolated perfused rat lung to metabolize the protein moieties of serum lipoproteins was assessed using homologous (rat) and heterologous (human) plasma lipoproteins. The protein and lipid moieties of the plasma lipoproteins were labeled in vivo with Na[125I]. In selected cases the lipoprotein peptides were labeled in vivo with 14C- or 3H-labeled amino acids. Uptake of lipoprotein label during perfusion was monitored by measure of losses in perfusate label and by rises in pulmonary tissue labeling as shown by radioassay and by light and electron microscope radioautography. Lipoprotein degradation was assessed by fractionation of perfusate and lung tissue radioactive material into trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-isoluble, TCA-soluble, and ether-ethanol-soluble fractions. When heparin was included in the perfusion medium, there was selective degradation of the protein portion of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) in the perfusate and concomitant uptake of radioactive label by the lungs. Low density lipoprotein (LDL)) was neither taken up nor catabolized by the isolated rat lung in the absence or presence of heparin. By light and electron microscopy, the label was localized over the interalveolar septa, predominantly the capillary endothelium. Disappearance of TCA-insoluble radioactivity from the perfusate was associated with the generation of both TCA-soluble iodide and noniodide radioactivity. Greater than 50% of the radioactive label taken up by the lungs was found in the delipidated TCA-insoluble fraction. This study provides in vitro evidence for pulmonary catabolism of VLDL apolipoproteins and uptake of peptide catabolic products of VLDL by the lung.  相似文献   

8.
The production of lipids, apolipoproteins (apo), and lipoproteins induced by oleic acid has been examined in Caco-2 cells. The rates of accumulation in the control medium of 15-day-old Caco-2 cells of triglycerides, unesterified cholesterol, and cholesteryl esters were 102 +/- 8, 73 +/- 5, and 11 +/- 1 ng/mg cell protein/h, respectively; the accumulation rates for apolipoproteins A-I, B, C-III, and E were 111 +/- 9, 53 +/- 4, 13 +/- 1, and 63 +/- 4 ng/mg cell protein/h, respectively. Whereas apolipoproteins A-IV and C-II were detected by immunoblotting, apoA-II was absent in most culture media. In contrast to an early production of apolipoproteins A-I and E occurring 2 days after plating, the apoB expression appeared to be differentiation-dependent and was not measurable in the medium until the sixth day post-confluency. In the control medium, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), low density lipoproteins (LDL), high density lipoproteins (HDL), and lipid-poor very high density lipoproteins (VHDL) accounted for 12%, 46%, 18%, and 24% of the total lipid and apolipoprotein contents, respectively. The triglyceride-rich VLDL contained mainly apoE (75%) and apoB (23%), while the protein moiety of LDL was composed of apoB (59%), apoE (20%), apoA-I (15%), and apoC-III (6%). The cholesterol-rich HDL contained mainly apoA-I (69%) and apoE (27%). In the control medium, major portions of apolipoproteins B and C-III (93-97%) were present in LDL, whereas the main parts of apoA-I (92%) and apoE (76%) were associated with HDL and VHDL. Oleate increased the production of triglycerides 10-fold, cholesteryl esters 7-fold, and apoB 2- to 4-fold. There was also a moderate increase (39%) in the production of apoC-III but no significant changes in those of apolipoproteins A-I and E. These increases were reflected mainly in a 55-fold elevation in the concentration of VLDL, and a 2-fold increase in the level of LDL; there were no significant changes in HDL and VHDL. VLDL contained the major parts of total neutral lipids (74-86%), apoB (65%), apoC-III (81%) and apoE (58%). In the presence of oleate, the VLDL, LDL, HDL, and VHDL accounted for 76%, 15%, 3%, and 6% of the total lipoproteins, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Factors affecting the association of apolipoprotein E (apoE) with human plasma very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) were investigated in experiments in which the lipid content of the lipoprotein was modified either by lipid transfer in the absence of lipolysis or through the action of lipoprotein lipase. In both cases, lipoprotein particles initially containing no apoE (VLDL-E), isolated by heparin affinity chromatography, were modified until they had the same lipid composition as native apoE-containing VLDL (VLDL+E) from the same plasma. Transfer-modified lipoproteins, unlike native VLDL+E, did not bind apoE or interact with heparin. In contrast, VLDL-E, whose lipid composition was modified to the same extent by lipase, bound apoE and bound to heparin under the same conditions as native VLDL+E. A structural protein (apolipoprotein B) epitope characteristic of VLDL+E was expressed during lipolysis prior to ApoE or heparin binding. The data suggest that the reaction of apoE with VLDL-E is a two-step reaction. The appearance of apoB is modified during lipolysis, with expression of a major heparin-binding site. The modified VLDL then becomes competent to bind apoE. The lipid composition of VLDL appears not to be a major factor in the ability of VLDL to bind apoE or to bind to heparin.  相似文献   

10.
Although the direct conversion of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) into low density (LDL) and high density (HDL) lipoproteins only requires lipoprotein lipase (LPL) as a catalyst and albumin as the fatty acid acceptor, the in vitro-formed LDL and HDL differ chemically from their native counterparts. To investigate the reason(s) for these differences, VLDL were treated with human milk LPL in the presence of albumin, and the LPL-generated LDL1-, LDL2-, and HDL-like particles were characterized by lipid and apolipoprotein composition. Results showed that the removal of apolipoproteins B, C, and E from VLDL was proportional to the degree of triglyceride hydrolysis with LDL2 particles as the major and LDL1 and HDL + VHDL particles as the minor products of a complete in vitro lipolysis of VLDL. In comparison with native counterparts, the in vitro-formed LDL2 and HDL + VHDL were characterized by lower levels of triglyceride and cholesterol ester and higher levels of free cholesterol and lipid phosphorus. The characterization of lipoprotein particles present in the in vitro-produced LDL2 showed that, as in plasma LDL2, lipoprotein B (LP-B) was the major apolipoprotein B-containing lipoprotein accounting for over 90% of the total apolipoprotein B. Other, minor species of apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins included LP-B:C-I:E and LP-B:C-I:C-II:C-III. The lipid composition of in vitro-formed LP-B closely resembled that of plasma LP-B. The major parts of apolipoproteins C and E present in VLDL were released to HDL + VHDL as simple, cholesterol/phospholipid-rich lipoproteins including LP-C-I, LP-C-II, LP-C-III, and LP-E. However, some of these same simple lipoprotein particles were present after ultracentrifugation in the LDL2 density segment because of their hydrated density and/or because they formed, in the absence of naturally occurring acceptors (LP-A-I:A-II), weak associations with LP-B. Thus, the presence of varying amounts of these cholesterol/phospholipid-rich lipoproteins in the in vitro-formed LDL2 appears to be the main reason for their compositional difference from native LDL2. These results demonstrate that the formation of LP-B as the major apolipoprotein B-containing product of VLDL lipolysis only requires LPL as a catalyst and albumin as the fatty acid acceptor. However, under physiological circumstances, other modulating agents are necessary to prevent the accumulation and interaction of phospholipid/cholesterol-rich apolipoprotein C- and E-containing particles.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanisms responsible for hypertriglyceridemia in Tangier disease were elucidated by an analysis of the plasma post-heparin lipolytic activities and the structural and metabolic properties of very low (VLDL) and low (LDL) density lipoproteins. The levels of lipoprotein lipase activity in six Tangier patients were significantly lower (P less than 0.001) than in 40 control subjects (8.1 +/- 3.3 (+/- S.D.) vs. 14.1 +/- 3.7 units/ml). In contrast, the levels of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase were higher (P less than 0.01) than in normal controls (14.4 +/- 3.9 vs. 9.3 +/- 4.0 units/ml). Because kinetic parameters such as Km or Vmax cannot be obtained with naturally occurring triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins, the pseudo-first-order rate constant (k1) of triacylglycerol hydrolysis was used to assess the effectiveness of triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins as substrates for lipoprotein lipase. The k1 values for Tangier VLDL (k1 = 0.017 +/- 0.002 min-1) were significantly lower (P less than 0.001) than the k1 values (0.036 +/- 0.008 min-1) for control VLDL. Both the Tangier and control LDL2 are similar in their resistance to the action of lipoprotein lipase, as shown by their low k1 values (0.002 +/- 0.001 and 0.001 +/- 0.001 min-1, respectively). The major compositional difference between the lipoproteins of Tangier disease and normal subjects was a significant increase in the percent content of apolipoprotein A-II in all lipoprotein particles with d less than 1.063 g/ml, with the greatest increase occurring in VLDL and the lowest in LDL2. These results were interpreted as indicating that, in Tangier disease, there is a lower reactivity of VLDL with lipoprotein lipase which may in part be attributed to the abnormal apolipoprotein composition. This finding, in conjunction with the reduced levels of lipoprotein lipase activity, may explain the hypertriglyceridemia in Tangier disease.  相似文献   

12.
Cultured Chinese-hamster ovary cells (CHO cells) were found to produce and secrete a lipase, which was identified as a lipoprotein lipase by the following criteria. Its activity was stimulated by serum and apolipoprotein CII, and was inhibited by high salt concentration. The lipase bound to heparin-agarose and co-eluted with 125I-labelled bovine lipoprotein lipase in a salt gradient. A chicken antiserum to bovine lipoprotein lipase inhibited the activity and precipitated a labelled protein of the same apparent size as bovine lipoprotein lipase from media of CHO cells labelled with [35S]methionine. The lipase activity and secretion were similar in growing cells and in cells that had reached confluency. Hence, lipoprotein lipase appears to be expressed constitutively in CHO cells and is not linked to certain growth conditions, as in pre-adipocyte and macrophage cell lines. At 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C, heparin increased the release of lipase to the medium 2-4-fold. This increased release occurred without depletion of cell-associated lipase activity, suggesting that heparin enhanced release of newly synthesized lipase.  相似文献   

13.
Isolation and analysis of lipoproteins secreted by rat liver hepatocytes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
A procedure has been developed for the small-scale isolation and characterization of lipoproteins secreted by cultured rat liver hepatocytes. The lipoproteins in the culture medium were separated into VLDL, LDL, HDL and a fraction with d greater than 1.21 on single-spin density-gradients. The lipoproteins were removed from the gradients by adsorption onto Cab-O-Sil, a hydrated colloidal silica. The lipid components were extracted from the silica with CHCl3/CH3OH and the apoproteins solubilized in a buffer that contained 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate and 6 M urea. The proteins were analyzed on 3-20% acrylamide electrophoresis gels that contained 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate. The two major rat-plasma lipoproteins, VLDL and HDL, were well separated by the gradients. The Cab-O-Sil was shown to bind 90-95% of the HDL and VLDL in the fractions from the gradient. The recovery of the lipid components was essentially quantitative. The recovery of the apolipoproteins was only about 60% but with very good precision. Over a 20 h period, the lipid phosphorus associated with secreted lipoproteins increased linearly. The secretion of apolipoprotein A1 and apolipoprotein E associated with HDL and apolipoprotein B associated with VLDL also increased as a nearly linear function with time. The secretion of apolipoprotein E associated with VLDL was linear only up to approx. 6 h. The availability of this procedure should greatly facilitate further studies on the characterization of lipoproteins secreted by hepatocytes and mechanisms that regulate lipoprotein synthesis and secretion.  相似文献   

14.
In order to explore the in vivo function of hepatic lipase, rats were injected with goat anti-rat hepatic lipase serum which produced a complete and specific inhibition of heparin-releasable hepatic lipase. In the fasting rats, protein, phospholipid and free cholesterol expressed as either mass or percent weight increased significantly in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein 2 (HDL-2) fractions. These three constituents were not affected in the VLDL and HDL-3 lipoproteins. In the fat-loaded (1 ml corn oil) rat, 6 h post inhibition of hepatic lipase triacylglycerol, phospholipid and free cholesterol concentrations in the d less than 1.006 fraction were 2.5-fold higher in the inhibited animals than in the control rats. The composition of the d less than 1.006 fraction was also affected. Expressed as percent mass, protein was lower (5.2 +/- 1.2 vs. 10.3 +/- 1.5, P less than 0.001) as was cholesteryl ester (1.7 +/- 0.7 vs. 2.6 +/- 0.4, P less than 0.01); triacylglycerol was elevated (77.2 +/- 4.0 vs. 72.6 +/- 2.4, P less than 0.025), as was free cholesterol (3.0 +/- 0.6 vs. 2.4 +/- 0.2, P less than 0.025). Overall, inhibition lowered the ratio of surface-to-core constituents suggesting a larger mean particle diameter. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed the intermediate- and low-density lipoprotein from treated rats to be significantly enriched in apolipoprotein B-48. In the LDL fraction, apolipoprotein B-48 accounted for 62 +/- 14% of the total apolipoprotein B in the inhibited rats, vs. 12 +/- 2% in the control rats. The above results support the previously described in vivo function of hepatic lipase as a phospholipase. In addition, the results demonstrate a role of hepatic lipase in the catabolism of chylomicrons. Since removal of apolipoprotein B-48-containing lipoproteins is dependent upon apolipoprotein E, their appearance in the LDL fraction implies a masking of apolipoprotein E-binding determinants.  相似文献   

15.
To determine the metabolic mechanism of hypercholesterolemia in rabbits produced by feeding cholesterol-rich diets, control and hypercholesterolemic rabbits were injected with I-labelled very low density lipoproteins (VLDL, d 1.006 g/ml) from control and/or hypercholesterolemic donors. Apolipoprotein B in VLDL decayed biphasically. The first phase occurred much more rapid than the second. 95% of the VLDL apolipoprotein B was catabolized via the first phase (t1/2 = 0.55 +/- 0.19 h) in normal rabbit with the immediate appearance of this radioactivity in intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL, d 1.006-1.025 g/ml) and low density lipoproteins (LDL, d 1.025-1.063 g/ml). The apolipoproteins C and E at the same time were transferred to high density lipoproteins where they decayed biphasically. The apolipoprotein B from hypercholesterolemic VLDL in the normal recipient disappeared at a similar rate as from normal VLDL via phase I; however, it was incompletely converted to IDL and LDL. Apolipoprotein B from normal VLDL in cholesterol-fed rabbits disappeared at a normal rate via phase I, but only 82% was catabolized by this phase. Hypercholesterolemic VLDL injected into the hypercholesterolemic recipient was less rapidly catabolized via phase I (T1/2 = 2.5 +/- 0.89 H) and only a small fraction was converted to IDL and LDL.  相似文献   

16.
The catabolism of human and rat 125I-labelled very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) was compared by perfusing the lipoproteins through beating rat hearts. Triacylglycerol was removed from the VLDL to a greater extent than the protein moiety, leaving remnants containing relatively more apo-B and less apo-C. The change in apo-C content of the remnants correlated with the loss of triacylglycerol. The extent of removal of triacylglycerol from the rat and human VLDL was similar and in most cases appeared to saturate the heart lipoprotein lipase. The remnants were slightly smaller in size than the VLDL, and included particles which appeared to be partially emptied. In addition to remnants of d less than 1.019 g/ml, iodinated lipoproteins derived from rat and human VLDL were recovered at d 1.019-1.063 and 1.063-1.21 g/ml. The former contained largely cholesterol and cholesteryl esters, while phospholipids were the dominant lipid in the latter. An average of 40% of the 125I-labelled apoprotein lost from the VLDL was associated with the perfused hearts. Very little d 1.019-1.063 g/ml lipoprotein was produced from low (physiological) concentrations of rat VLDL, most of the lipoprotein being removed by the heart. However, lipoproteins of density 1.019-1.063 g/ml were formed from human VLDL at all concentrations in the perfusate, as well as from higher concentrations of the rat VLDL. Agarose gel filtration of lipoproteins following heart perfusion with human VLDL revealed large aggregates containing particles which resemble low density lipoproteins (LDL) in electron microscopic appearance and apoprotein composition, since they contain largely apo-B. These data suggest that at normal concentrations rat VLDL are almost completely catabolised and taken up by the heart without the formation of LDL, while LDL is produced from human VLDL at all concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Guha M  England C  Herscovitz H  Gursky O 《Biochemistry》2007,46(20):6043-6049
Very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) are metabolic precursors of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) and a risk factor for atherosclerosis. Human VLDL are heterogeneous complexes containing a triacylglycerol-rich apolar lipid core and polar surface composed of phospholipids, a nonexchangeable apolipoprotein B, and exchangeable apolipoproteins E and Cs. We report the first stability study of VLDL. Circular dichroism and turbidity data reveal an irreversible heat-induced VLDL transition that involves formation of larger particles and repacking of apolar lipids but no global protein unfolding. Heating rate effect on the melting temperature indicates a kinetically controlled reaction with high activation energy, Ea. Arrhenius analysis of the turbidity data reveals two kinetic phases with Ea = 53 +/- 7 kcal/mol that correspond to distinct morphological transitions observed by electron microscopy. One transition involves VLDL fusion, partial rupture, and dissociation of small spherical particles (d = 7-15 nm), and another involves complete lipoprotein disintegration and lipid coalescence into droplets accompanied by dissociation of apolipoprotein B. The small particles, which are unique to VLDL denaturation, are comparable in size and density to high-density lipoproteins (HDL); they have an apolar lipid core and polar surface composed of exchangeable apolipoproteins (E and possibly Cs) and phospholipids. We conclude that, similar to HDL and LDL, VLDL are stabilized by kinetic barriers that prevent particle fusion and rupture and decelerate spontaneous interconversion among lipoprotein classes and subclasses. In addition to fusion, VLDL disruption involves transient formation of HDL-like particles that may mimic protein exchange among VLDL and HDL pools in plasma.  相似文献   

18.
Rat liver endothelial cells in primary cultures take up and degrade 125I-labelled human very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) in a saturable fashion at physiological triacylglycerol concentrations. The iodinated VLDL are readily taken up by the freshly isolated endothelial cells and degradation products appear in the medium about 30 min after the addition of VLDL to the cultures. Uptake and degradation at 37 degrees C are effectively inhibited by unlabelled human VLDL, low-density lipoproteins (LDL), high-density lipoproteins and lymph chylomicrons, but only modestly by acetylated LDL. Purified apolipoproteins E and C-III:1 also compete with the uptake of iodinated VLDL, but when degradation was studied for longer periods of time, such a competition could not be demonstrated. This may be due to the fact that the added apolipoproteins become associated with the lipoproteins. In binding experiments at 7 degrees C, iodinated apolipoprotein C III:1 bound to the liver endothelial cells in a manner characteristic of receptor binding with a dissociation constant of 0.5 microM. This binding could not only be inhibited by unlabelled apolipoprotein C-III:1 but also by unlabelled apolipoprotein E. The results indicate that rat liver endothelial cells carry receptors for VLDL and that these recognize the apolipoproteins E, C-III and B on the lipoprotein surface. Considering the large endothelial surface and high blood flow through the liver, significant quantities of lipoproteins can be taken up and degraded, thus influencing the levels of circulating lipoproteins in the in vivo situation.  相似文献   

19.
The site of cartilage matrix degradation.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
1. The metabolism of VLD lipoproteins (very-low-density lipoproteins) was studied in intact isolated beating-heart cells and isolated perfused rat heart from starved animals by using [14C]triacylglycerol fatty acid-labelled VLD lipoprotein prepared from rats previously injected with [1-14C]palmitate. 2. 14C-labelled VLD lipoprotein was metabolized by the isolated perfused heart, but was only minimally metabolized by the heart cells unless an exogenous source of lipoprotein lipase was added. 3. Measurements of lipoprotein lipase at pH 7.4 with the natural substrate 14C-labelled VLD lipoprotein indicated that during collagenase perfusion of the heart the enzyme was released into the perfusate, the activity released being proportional to the concentration of collagenase used. Lipoprotein lipase activity in homogenates of hearts that had been perfused with collagenase showed a corresponding loss of activity. 4. At high perfusate concentrations of collagenase, inactivation of the released lipoprotein lipase occurred. 5. Lipoprotein lipase activity was largely undetectable in the homogenate of the isolated heart cells. 6. It is concluded that the lipoprotein lipase responsible for the hydrolysis of VLD lipoprotein triacylglycerol is predominantly located externally to the heart muscle cells and that its release can be facilitated by perfusion of the heart with bacterial collagenase.  相似文献   

20.
In streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats, we previously showed an increased heparin-releasable (luminal) lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity from perfused hearts. To study the effect of this enlarged LPL pool on triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins, we examined the metabolism of very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) perfused through control and diabetic hearts. Diabetic rats had elevated TG levels compared with control. However, fasting for 16 h abolished this difference. When the plasma lipoprotein fraction of density <1.006 g/ml from fasted control and diabetic rats was incubated in vitro with purified bovine or rat LPL, VLDL from diabetic animals was hydrolyzed as proficiently as VLDL from control animals. Post-heparin plasma lipolytic activity was comparable in control and diabetic animals. However, perfusion of control and diabetic rats with heparinase indicated that diabetic hearts had larger amounts of LPL bound to heparan sulfate proteoglycan-binding sites. [(3)H]VLDL obtained from control rats, when recirculated through the isolated heart, disappeared at a significantly faster rate from diabetic than from control rat hearts. This increased VLDL-TG hydrolysis was essentially abolished by prior perfusion of the diabetic heart with heparin, implicating LPL in this process. These findings suggest that the enlarged LPL pool in the diabetic heart is present at a functionally relevant location (at the capillary lumen) and is capable of hydrolyzing VLDL. This could increase the delivery of free fatty acid to the heart, and the resultant metabolic changes could induce the subsequent cardiomyopathy that is observed in the chronic diabetic rat.  相似文献   

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