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1.
Human high density lipoproteins2 (HDL2) consist of particles that contain both apolipoprotein (apo) A-I and apoA-II (A-I/A-II-HDL2) and others that contain apoA-I but are devoid of apoA-II (A-I-HDL2). When postprandial lipemia is pronounced, a fraction of HDL2 is converted into HDL2-like particles. These HDL3 exhibit lower apoA-I/apoA-II ratios than the parent HDL2, suggesting preferential conversion of A-I/A-II-HDL2 into HDL3 (J. Clin. Invest. 1984. 74: 2017-2023). Triglyceride transfer from triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to HDL2 and subsequent lipolysis by hepatic lipase are thought to mediate the conversion of HDL2 into HDL3. To understand why A-I/A-II-HDL2 are preferentially converted into HDL3, we separated postprandial HDL2 into A-I-HDL2 and A-I/A-II-HDL2 species by immunoaffinity chromatography using a monoclonal antibody for apoA-II, and determined the ability of HDL2 species i) to participate in protein-mediated lipid transfer; and ii) to interact with hepatic lipase in vitro. Triglyceride transfer from/to triglyceride-rich lipoproteins was similar for the two HDL2 species. In contrast, A-I/A-II-HDL2 were twice as effective as A-I-HDL2 in liberating hepatic lipase immobilized on HDL3-Sepharose. Lipolysis of triglycerides by hepatic lipase was 60% higher in postprandial A-I/A-II-HDL2 than in postprandial A-I-HDL2. Hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine by hepatic lipase was threefold higher in A-II-containing HDL2 when compared with HDL2 devoid of apoA-II. The different lipolytic rates in HDL2 subspecies correlated with the size reduction of substrate lipoproteins. Reconstitution of postprandial A-I-HDL2 with apoA-II enhanced the rate of lipolysis by hepatic lipase to that observed in A-I/A-II-HDL2. We conclude that it is the interaction with hepatic lipase rather than the rate of triglyceride transfer that results in the preferred conversion of postprandial A-II-containing HDL2 into HDL3, and that apoA-II exerts a crucial role in this process.  相似文献   

2.
High density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels are inversely related to the risk of developing coronary heart disease. Apolipoprotein (apo) A-II is the second most abundant HDL apolipoprotein and apoA-II knockout mice show a 70% reduction in HDL cholesterol levels. There is also evidence, using human apoA-II transgenic mice, that apoA-II can prevent hepatic lipase-mediated HDL triglyceride hydrolysis and reduction in HDL size. These observations suggest the hypothesis that apoA-II maintains HDL levels, at least in part, by inhibiting hepatic lipase. To evaluate this, apoA-II knockout mice were crossbred with hepatic lipase knockout mice. Compared to apoA-II-deficient mice, in double knockout mice there were increased HDL cholesterol levels (57% in males and 60% in females), increased HDL size, and decreased HDL cholesteryl ester fractional catabolic rate. In vitro incubation studies of plasma from apoA-II knockout mice, which contains largely apoA-I HDL particles, showed active lipolysis of HDL triglyceride, whereas similar studies of plasma from apoA-I knockout mice, which contains largely apoA-II particles, did not. In summary, these results strongly suggest that apoA-II is a physiological inhibitor of hepatic lipase and that this is at least part of the mechanism whereby apoA-II maintains HDL cholesterol levels.  相似文献   

3.
Apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II) is the second major apolipoprotein following apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) in HDL. ApoA-II has multiple physiological functions and can form senile amyloid fibrils (AApoAII) in mice. Most circulating apoA-II is present in lipoprotein A-I/A-II. To study the influence of apoA-I on apoA-II and AApoAII amyloidosis, apoA-I-deficient (C57BL/6J.Apoa1−/−) mice were used. Apoa1−/− mice showed the expected significant reduction in total cholesterol (TC), HDL cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglyceride (TG) plasma levels. Unexpectedly, we found that apoA-I deficiency led to redistribution of apoA-II in HDL and an age-related increase in apoA-II levels, accompanied by larger HDL particle size and an age-related increase in TC, HDL-C, and TG. Aggravated AApoAII amyloidosis was induced in Apoa1−/− mice systemically, especially in the heart. These results indicate that apoA-I plays key roles in maintaining apoA-II distribution and HDL particle size. Furthermore, apoA-II redistribution may be the main reason for aggravated AApoAII amyloidosis in Apoa1−/− mice. These results may shed new light on the relationship between apoA-I and apoA-II as well as provide new information concerning amyloidosis mechanism and therapy.  相似文献   

4.
Studies with mice have revealed that increased expression of apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II) results in elevations in high density lipoprotein (HDL), the formation of larger HDL, and the development of early atherosclerosis. We now show that the increased size of HDL results in part from an inhibition of the ability of hepatic lipase (HL) to hydrolyze phospholipids and triglycerides in the HDL and that the ratio of apoA-I to apoA-II determines HDL functional and antiatherogenic properties. HDL from apoA-II transgenic mice was relatively resistant to the action of HL in vitro. To test whether HL and apoA-II influence HDL size independently, combined apoA-II transgenic/HL knockout (HLko) mice were examined. These mice had HDL similar in size to apoA-II transgenic mice and HLko mice, suggesting that they do not increase HDL side by independent mechanisms. Overexpression of apoA-I from a transgene reversed many of the effects of apoA-II overexpression, including the ability of HDL to serve as a substrate for HL. Combined apoA-I/apoA-II transgenic mice exhibited significantly less atherosclerotic lesion formation than did apoA-II transgenic mice. These results were paralleled by the effects of the transgenes on the ability of HDL to protect against the proinflammatory effects of oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL). Whereas nontransgenic HDL protected against oxidized LDL induction of adhesion molecules in endothelial cells, HDL from apoA-II transgenic mice was proinflammatory. HDL from combined apoA-I/apoA-II transgenic mice was equally as protective as HDL from nontransgenic mice. Our data suggest that as the ratio of apoA-II to apoA-I is increased, the HDL become larger because of inhibition of HL, and lose their antiatherogenic properties.  相似文献   

5.
Human plasma HDLs are classified on the basis of apolipoprotein composition into those that contain apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) without apoA-II [(A-I)HDL] and those containing apoA-I and apoA-II [(A-I/A-II)HDL]. ApoA-I enters the plasma as a component of discoidal particles, which are remodeled into spherical (A-I)HDL by LCAT. ApoA-II is secreted into the plasma either in the lipid-free form or as a component of discoidal high density lipoproteins containing apoA-II without apoA-I [(A-II)HDL]. As discoidal (A-II)HDL are poor substrates for LCAT, they are not converted into spherical (A-II)HDL. This study investigates the fate of apoA-II when it enters the plasma. Lipid-free apoA-II and apoA-II-containing discoidal reconstituted HDL [(A-II)rHDL] were injected intravenously into New Zealand White rabbits, a species that is deficient in apoA-II. In both cases, the apoA-II was rapidly and quantitatively incorporated into spherical (A-I)HDL to form spherical (A-I/A-II)HDL. These particles were comparable in size and composition to the (A-I/A-II)HDL in human plasma. Injection of lipid-free apoA-II and discoidal (A-II)rHDL was also accompanied by triglyceride enrichment of the endogenous (A-I)HDL and VLDL as well as the newly formed (A-I/A-II)HDL. We conclude that, irrespective of the form in which apoA-II enters the plasma, it is rapidly incorporated into spherical HDLs that also contain apoA-I to form (A-I/A-II)HDL.  相似文献   

6.
Treatment with the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ agonist rosiglitazone has been reported to increase HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels, although the mechanism responsible for this is unknown. We sought to determine the effect of rosiglitazone on HDL apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and apoA-II metabolism in subjects with metabolic syndrome and low HDL-C. Subjects were treated with placebo followed by rosiglitazone (8 mg) once daily. At the end of each 8 week treatment, subjects (n = 15) underwent a kinetic study to measure apoA-I and apoA-II production rate (PR) and fractional catabolic rate. Rosiglitazone significantly reduced fasting insulin and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and increased apoA-II levels. Mean apoA-I and HDL-C levels were unchanged following rosiglitazone treatment, although there was considerable individual variability in the HDL-C response. Rosiglitazone had no effect on apoA-I metabolism, whereas the apoA-II PR was increased by 23%. The change in HDL-C in response to rosiglitazone was significantly correlated with the change in apoA-II concentration but not to changes in apoA-I, measures of glucose homeostasis, or hsCRP. Treatment with rosiglitazone significantly increased apoA-II production in subjects with metabolic syndrome and low HDL-C but had no effect on apoA-I metabolism. The change in HDL-C in response to rosiglitazone treatment was unrelated to effects on apoA-I, instead being related to the change in the metabolism of apoA-II.  相似文献   

7.
Gao X  Yuan S  Jayaraman S  Gursky O 《Biochemistry》2012,51(23):4633-4641
High-density lipoproteins (HDL, or "good cholesterol") are heterogeneous nanoparticles that remove excess cell cholesterol and protect against atherosclerosis. The cardioprotective action of HDL and its major protein, apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), is well-established, yet the function of the second major protein, apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II), is less clear. In this review, we postulate an ensemble of apolipoprotein conformations on various HDL. This ensemble is based on the crystal structure of Δ(185-243)apoA-I determined by Mei and Atkinson combined with the "double-hairpin" conformation of apoA-II(dimer) proposed in the cross-linking studies by Silva's team, and is supported by the wide array of low-resolution structural, biophysical, and biochemical data obtained by many teams over decades. The proposed conformational ensemble helps integrate and improve several existing HDL models, including the "buckle-belt" conformation of apoA-I on the midsize disks and the "trefoil/tetrafoil" arrangement on spherical HDL. This ensemble prompts us to hypothesize that endogenous apoA-II (i) helps confer lipid surface curvature during conversion of nascent discoidal HDL(A-I) and HDL(A-II) containing either apoA-I or apoA-II to mature spherical HDL(A-I/A-II) containing both proteins, and (ii) hinders remodeling of HDL(A-I/A-II) by hindering the expansion of the apoA-I conformation. Also, we report that, although endogenous apoA-II circulates mainly on the midsize spherical HDL(A-I/A-II), exogenous apoA-II can bind to HDL of any size, thereby slightly increasing this size and stabilizing the HDL assembly. This suggests distinctly different effects of the endogenous and exogenous apoA-II on HDL. Taken together, the existing results and models prompt us to postulate a new structural and functional role of apoA-II on human HDL.  相似文献   

8.
The high density lipoproteins (HDL) in human plasma are classified on the basis of apolipoprotein composition into those containing apolipoprotein (apo) A-I but not apoA-II, (A-I)HDL, and those containing both apoA-I and apoA-II, (A-I/A-II)HDL. Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) transfers core lipids between HDL and other lipoproteins. It also remodels (A-I)HDL into large and small particles in a process that generates lipid-poor, pre-beta-migrating apoA-I. Lipid-poor apoA-I is the initial acceptor of cellular cholesterol and phospholipids in reverse cholesterol transport. The aim of this study is to determine whether lipid-poor apoA-I is also formed when (A-I/A-II)rHDL are remodeled by CETP. Spherical reconstituted HDL that were identical in size had comparable lipid/apolipoprotein ratios and either contained apoA-I only, (A-I)rHDL, or (A-I/A-II)rHDL were incubated for 0-24 h with CETP and Intralipid(R). At 6 h, the apoA-I content of the (A-I)rHDL had decreased by 25% and there was a concomitant formation of lipid-poor apoA-I. By 24 h, all of the (A-I)rHDL were remodeled into large and small particles. CETP remodeled approximately 32% (A-I/A-II)rHDL into small but not large particles. Lipid-poor apoA-I did not dissociate from the (A-I/A-II)rHDL. The reasons for these differences were investigated. The binding of monoclonal antibodies to three epitopes in the C-terminal domain of apoA-I was decreased in (A-I/A-II)rHDL compared with (A-I)rHDL. When the (A-I/A-II)rHDL were incubated with Gdn-HCl at pH 8.0, the apoA-I unfolded by 15% compared with 100% for the apoA-I in (A-I)rHDL. When these incubations were repeated at pH 4.0 and 2.0, the apoA-I in the (A-I)rHDL and the (A-I/A-II)rHDL unfolded completely. These results are consistent with salt bridges between apoA-II and the C-terminal domain of apoA-I, enhancing the stability of apoA-I in (A-I/A-II)rHDL and possibly contributing to the reduced remodeling and absence of lipid poor apoA-I in the (A-I/A-II)rHDL incubations.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The precise nature and origin(s) of the abnormalities in lipoprotein and apolipoprotein profile associated with severe hepatic dysfunction and the presence of spur cells remain poorly defined. To shed light on this question, we have analyzed the plasma lipoprotein and apolipoprotein profiles in five patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and spur cells, and compared them with those of a group with similar hepatocellular dysfunction, but lacking spur cells, and with that of a control group. Lipoproteins were subfractionated by density gradient ultracentrifugation and their physicochemical properties were determined; apolipoprotein A-I, A-II, and B contents in plasma and the respective subfractions were quantitated by radial immunodiffusion, while the complement of low molecular weight apolipoproteins in each subfraction was analyzed by isoelectric focusing and electrophoresis in alkaline-urea polyacrylamide gels. Spur cell plasma was distinguished by reduced levels of apoA-II and elevated ratios of apoA-I/apoA-II (approximately 13:1 as compared to 3.3-3.9:1 in the other two groups), and by reduced concentrations of HDL3. Gradient fractionation showed the apoA-II content of HDL3 to be dramatically and significantly diminished in spur cell plasma; in addition, apoA-II content was reduced relative to apoA-I in this subclass (4.7:1 as compared to 1:1 in cirrhotics lacking spur cells and 1.9:1 in controls). Spur cell HDL2 was similarly deficient in apoA-II, with elevated ratios of apoA-I:apoA-II (9.8:1 in comparison with 1.9-2.5:1 in the two other groups). Nonetheless, high HDL2 concentrations were seen in both series of cirrhotic patients, irrespective of red cell morphology. Spur cell HDL2 thus appears to consist primarily of particles possessing only apoA-I, with a minor population containing both apoA-I and apoA-II. The free cholesterol content of all lipoprotein subfractions from spur cell plasma was increased, as indeed was the molar ratio of free cholesterol to phospholipid, in comparison with that of corresponding fractions from alcoholic cirrhotics lacking spur cells and of control subjects. LDL levels were reduced in spur cell plasma, thereby distinguishing this group from the cirrhotics without spur cells who displayed elevated LDL levels. Markedly reduced plasma levels of apoA-II, HDL3, and LDL appear characteristic of alcoholic cirrhotics presenting with spur cells. Our findings suggest that apoA-II may be essential to the normal function and metabolism of HDL, one aspect of which may be the transport of free cholesterol and thereby the direct or indirect maintenance of red cell morphology.  相似文献   

11.
To evaluate the sources of high density lipoprotein (HDL) particles containing only apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), the synthesis of apoA-I and apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II) was examined in human liver and small intestine as well as the human intestinally derived cell line, Caco-2. Human liver contained apoA-I, apoA-II as well as apolipoprotein B (apoB) mRNA. In contrast, human adult small intestine total and polyA+ RNA had little or no apoA-II despite the presence of apoA-I and apoB. Intestinal biopsies from normal individuals failed to show de novo apoA-II protein synthesis in the media of organ cultures during [35S]methionine pulse-chase labeling, whereas apoA-I could be readily detected. Caco-2 cells contained apoA-II mRNA and secreted apoA-II protein into the tissue culture media. These data indicate that the primary site of human apoA-II synthesis is in the liver and that the small intestine secretes apoA-I-containing high density lipoproteins.  相似文献   

12.
Hypertriglyceridemia is a common pathological condition in humans of mostly unknown etiology. Here we report induction of dyslipidemia characterized by severe hypertriglyceridemia as a result of point mutations in human apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I). Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer in apoA-I-deficient (apoA-I(-)(/)(-)) mice showed that mice expressing an apoA-I[E110A/E111A] mutant had comparable hepatic mRNA levels with WT controls but greatly increased plasma triglyceride and elevated plasma cholesterol levels. In addition, they had decreased apoE and apoCII levels and increased apoB48 levels in very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL)/intermediate-density lipoprotein (IDL). Fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) analysis of plasma showed that most of cholesterol and approximately 15% of the mutant apoA-I were distributed in the VLDL and IDL regions and all the triglycerides in the VLDL region. Hypertriglyceridemia was corrected by coinfection of mice with recombinant adenoviruses expressing the mutant apoA-I and human lipoprotein lipase. Physicochemical studies indicated that the apoA-I mutation decreased the alpha-helical content, the stability, and the unfolding cooperativity of both lipid-free and lipid-bound apoA-I. In vitro functional analyses showed that reconstituted HDL (rHDL) particles containing the mutant apoA-I had 53% of scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI)-mediated cholesterol efflux capacity and 37% capacity to activate lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) as compared to the WT control. The mutant lipid-free apoA-I had normal capacity to promote ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1)-dependent cholesterol efflux. The findings indicate that subtle structural alterations in apoA-I may alter the stability and functions of apoA-I and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and may cause hypertriglyceridemia.  相似文献   

13.
Incubation of low (LDL), intermediate (IDL), or very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) with palmitic acid and either high density lipoproteins (HDL), delipidated HDL, or purified apolipoprotein (apo) A-I resulted in the formation of lipoprotein particles with discoidal structure and mean particle diameters ranging from 146 to 254 A by electron microscopy. Discs produced from IDL or LDL averaged 26% protein, 42% phospholipid, 5% cholesteryl esters, 24% free cholesterol, and 3% triglycerides; preparations derived from VLDL contained up to 21% triglycerides. ApoA-I was the predominant protein present, with smaller amounts of apoA-II. Crosslinking studies of discs derived from LDL or IDL indicated the presence of four apoA-I molecules per particle, while those derived from large VLDL varied more in size and contained as many as six apoA-I molecules per particle. Incubation of discs derived from IDL or LDL with purified lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), albumin, and a source of free cholesterol produced core-containing particles with size and composition similar to HDL2b. VLDL-derived discs behaved similarly, although the HDL products were somewhat larger and more variable in size. When discs were incubated with plasma d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction rather than LCAT, core-containing particles in the size range of normal HDL2a and HDL3a were also produced. A variety of other purified free fatty acids were shown to promote disc formation. In addition, some mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids facilitated the formation of smaller, spherical particles in the size range of HDL3c. Both discoidal and small spherical apoA-I-containing lipoproteins were generated when native VLDL was incubated with lipoprotein lipase in the presence of delipidated HDL. We conclude that lipolysis product-mediated dissociation of lipid-apoA-I complexes from VLDL, IDL, or LDL may be a mechanism for formation of HDL subclasses during lipolysis, and that the availability of different lipids may influence the type of HDL-precursors formed by this mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Obese mice without leptin (ob/ob) or the leptin receptor (db/db) have increased plasma HDL levels and accumulate a unique lipoprotein referred to as LDL/HDL1. To determine the role of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) in the formation and accumulation of LDL/HDL1, both ob/ob and db/db mice were crossed onto an apoA-I-deficient (apoA-I(-/-)) background. Even though the obese apoA-I(-/-) mice had an expected dramatic decrease in HDL levels, the LDL/HDL1 particle persisted. The cholesterol in this lipoprotein range was associated with both alpha- and beta-migrating particles, confirming the presence of small LDLs and large HDLs. Moreover, in the obese apoA-I(-/-) mice, LDL particles were smaller and HDLs were more negatively charged and enriched in apoE compared with controls. This LDL/HDL1 particle was rapidly remodeled to the size of normal HDL after injection into C57BL/6 mice, but it was not catabolized in obese apoA-I(-/-) mice even though plasma hepatic lipase (HL) activity was increased significantly. The finding of decreased hepatic scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) protein levels may explain the persistence of LDL/HDL1 in obese apoA-I(-/-) mice. Our studies suggest that the maturation and removal of large HDLs depends on the integrity of a functional axis of apoA-I, HL, and SR-BI. Moreover, the presence of large HDLs without apoA-I provides evidence for an apoA-I-independent pathway of cholesterol efflux, possibly sustained by apoE.  相似文献   

16.
Endothelial lipase (EL) is a triglyceride lipase gene family member that has high phospholipase and low triglyceride lipase activity. The aim of this study was to determine whether the phospholipase activity of EL is sufficient to remodel HDLs into small particles and mediate the dissociation of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I). Spherical, reconstituted HDLs (rHDLs) containing apoA-I only [(A-I)rHDLs], apoA-II only [(A-II)rHDLs], or both apoA-I and apoA-II [(A-I/A-II) rHDLs] were prepared. The rHDLs, which contained only cholesteryl esters in their core and POPC on the surface, were incubated with EL. As the rHDLs did not contain triacylglycerol, only the POPC was hydrolyzed. Hydrolysis was greater in the (A-I/A-II)rHDLs than in the (A-I)rHDLs. The (A-II)rHDL phospholipids were not hydrolyzed by EL. EL remodeled the (A-I)rHDLs and (A-I/A-II)rHDLs, but not the (A-II)rHDLs, into smaller particles. The reduction in particle size was related to the amount of phospholipid hydrolysis, with the diameter of the (A-I/A-II)rHDLs decreasing more than that of the (A-I)rHDLs. These changes did not affect the conformation of apoA-I, and neither apoA-I nor apoA-II dissociated from the rHDLs. Comparable results were obtained when human plasma HDLs were incubated with EL. These results establish that the phospholipase activity of EL remodels plasma HDLs and rHDLs into smaller particles without mediating the dissociation of apolipoproteins.  相似文献   

17.
Endothelial lipase (EL) plays an important physiological role in modulating HDL metabolism. Data suggest that plasma contains an inhibitor of EL, and previous studies have suggested that apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II) inhibits the activity of several enzymes involved in HDL metabolism. Therefore, we hypothesized that apoA-II may reduce the ability of EL to influence HDL metabolism. To test this hypothesis, we determined the effect of EL expression on plasma phospholipase activity and HDL metabolism in human apoA-I and human apoA-I/A-II transgenic mice. Expression of EL in vivo resulted in lower plasma phospholipase activity and significantly less reduction of HDL-cholesterol, phospholipid, and apoA-I levels in apoA-I/A-II double transgenic mice compared with apoA-I single transgenic mice. We conclude that the presence of apoA-II on HDL particles inhibits the ability of EL to influence the metabolism of HDL in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
To test whether estrogen can modulate the cholesterolemic response to an Occidental diet, six healthy postmenopausal women were studied for 84 days while ingesting a solid food diet of constant composition high in cholesterol content (995 mg/d). In the middle of the study, estrogen (17 alpha-ethinyl estradiol, 1 microgram/kg per day) was administered orally. Ingestion of the diet for the initial 28 days did not alter lipoprotein lipid or apolipoprotein (apo) levels. However, with just 4 days of estrogen use there were significant decreases in apoE (-36%), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (-26%), and postheparin plasma hepatic triglyceride lipase activity (HTGL) (-61%), and an increase in high density lipoprotein (HDL) triglyceride (72%). These changes persisted throughout the estrogen use. The percent change in HTGL with 4 days of estrogen correlated inversely with the percent change in HDL triglyceride (rs = -0.94). After 28 days of estrogen there were also significant increases in HDL cholesterol (21%), HDL2 cholesterol (42%), apoA-I (37%), and apoA-II (9%), and a decrease in apoB (-11%). The level of apoE at this juncture correlated inversely with the level of HDL cholesterol (rs = -0.90), and the levels of HTGL and apoA-I correlated with HDL2 cholesterol (rs = -0.89 and rs = 0.89, respectively). Thus, HTGL may play a role in both the early estrogen-related changes in HDL triglyceride and apoE and the late estrogen-related changes in HDL cholesterol, apoA-I, and apoA-II.  相似文献   

19.
The inverse relationship between plasma levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) and coronary heart disease rates has suggested that HDL might influence body stores of cholesterol. Therefore, we have investigated potential relationships between the parameters of body cholesterol metabolism and the plasma levels of HDL cholesterol and the major HDL apoproteins. The study involved 55 human subjects who underwent long-term cholesterol turnover studies, as well as plasma lipoprotein and apolipoprotein assays. In order to maximize the likelihood of detecting existing relationships, the subjects were selected to span a wide range of plasma levels of lipids, lipoproteins, and apolipoproteins. Single univariate correlation analyses suggested weak but statistically significant inverse relationships of HDL cholesterol and apoA-I levels with the following model parameters: production rate (PR), the mass of rapidly exchanging body cholesterol (M1), the minimum estimate of the mass of slowly exchanging body cholesterol (M3min), and of the mass of total exchangeable body cholesterol (Mtotmin). These correlations, however, were quantitatively quite small (/r/ = 0.28-0.42) in comparison to the strength of the univariate relationships between body weight and PR (r = 0.76), M1 (r = 0.61), M3min (r = 0.58), and Mtotmin (r = 0.78). Correlations for apoA-II and apoE levels were even smaller than those for apoA-I and HDL cholesterol. In additional analyses using multivariate approaches, HDL cholesterol, apoA-I, apoA-II, and apoE levels were all found not to be independent determinants of the parameters of body cholesterol metabolism (/partial r/ less than 0.17, P greater than 0.3 in all cases). Thus the weak univariate correlations reflect relationships of HDL cholesterol and apoA-I levels with physiological variables, such as body size, which are primarily related to the model parameters. We conclude that plasma levels of HDL cholesterol and apoproteins A-I, A-II, and E are not quantitatively important independent determinants of the mass of slowly exchanging body cholesterol or of other parameters of long-term cholesterol turnover in humans. These studies give no support to the hypothesis that the inverse relationship between HDL cholesterol levels and coronary heart disease rates is mediated via an influence of HDL on body stores of cholesterol.  相似文献   

20.
Small particles of high density lipoproteins (HDL) were isolated from fresh, fasting human plasma and from the ultracentrifugally isolated high density lipoprotein fraction by means of ultrafiltration through membranes of molecular weight cutoff of 70,000. These particles were found to contain cholesterol, phospholipids, and apolipoproteins A-I and A-II; moreover, they floated at a density of 1.21 kg/l. They contained 67.5% of their mass as protein and the rest as lipid. Two populations of small HDL particles were identified: one containing apolipoprotein A-I alone [(A-I)HDL] and the other containing both apolipoproteins A-I and A-II [A-I + A-II)HDL]. The molar ratio of apoA-I to apoA-II in the latter subclass isolated from plasma or HDL was 1:1. The molecular weights of these subpopulations were determined by nondenaturing gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and found to be 70,000; 1.5% of the plasma apoA-I was recovered in the plasma ultrafiltrate.  相似文献   

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