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1.
Extensive heterogeneity in particle size distribution of serum lipoproteins of baboons was resolved by a procedure that combined Sudan black B prestaining, polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis (GGE), and quantitative densitometry. Each densitometric scan represented a continuous distribution of the relative amount of cholesterol in a serum sample, as a function of the lipoprotein particle size. For analytical purposes, each scan was divided into 12 fractions, representing 12 particle size ranges. The relationship between the estimated cholesterol concentrations in the summed GGE/densitometric fractions corresponding to very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) + low-density lipoproteins (LDL) and those corresponding to high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and concentrations measured by the heparin-Mn2+ precipitation/enzymatic procedure was linear over a broad range. However, a systematic overestimation of HDL cholesterol concentration and an underestimation of VLDL + LDL cholesterol concentration was apparent. Therefore, correction factors were developed for adjusting the estimates of VLDL + LDL and HDL cholesterol concentrations obtained by the GGE/densitometric method. This analytical method is rapid, repeatable, economical, and useful for genetic and dietary research in which cholesterol concentrations in multiple particle size ranges of lipoproteins must be measured in large numbers of samples. It also is adaptable to immunoblotting procedures for detecting the distribution of specific apolipoproteins among the size-resolved lipoproteins.  相似文献   

2.
1. Equine lipoproteins were isolated from plasma by density gradient ultracentrifugation and apolipoprotein composition determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 2. VLDL and IDL were present at low concentration (0.2 mg/ml). Two apoB components of Mr corresponding to human apoB-100 and one apoB-48-like component were represented in VLDL fraction. 3. LDL-1 and LDL-2 subfractions have displayed an almost equal concentration (0.4 mg/ml). Two apoB-100-like components were the major apolipoproteins in each fraction. Small amounts of apoB-48-like component were detectable in LDL-1 and LDL-2. 4. HDL-2 represented a major class of equine lipoproteins (1.8 mg/ml). ApoA-1-like component was the dominant protein in HDL-1, HDL-2 and HDL-3. Dimeric apoA-II-like components were slightly represented in HDL subfractions. 5. HDL-3 displayed the same apolipoprotein pattern as HDL-1 and HDL-2, but two further minor proteins of Mr 20,000 and 14,000 were detected. 6. VHDL represented a minor class of lipoprotein (0.2 mg/ml). ApoA-I-like component was the major apolipoprotein of VHDL. Small amounts of apoA-IV-like, apoE-like, and Mr 55,000 protein were detectable. 7. ApoC-like of Mr lower than 10,000 was represented in all equine lipoprotein classes.  相似文献   

3.
Human serum lipoproteins are currently defined according to their density as well as according to their electrophoretic mobility. They can be fractionated into discrete subspecies which exhibit variations in their structure and function. Capillary electrophoresis has been suggested to be a potential analytical strategy in understanding metabolic lipoprotein heterogeneity. In a sample of 35 normolipidemic subjects, we analyzed ceramide-labeled serum lipoproteins by capillary isotachophoresis linked to laser-induced fluorescent detection. Capillary isotachophoresis showed advantage to be an automated, rapid (6 min) and reproducible (CV < 7%) separation mode, on-line monitoring lipoprotein subfractions according to net charge. HDL were separated into three subfractions: i) the fast migrating HDL correlated positively with serum apoA-I (P < 0.05) and negatively with triglyceride (P < 0.01) concentrations, ii) the intermediate migrating HDL involved in HDL-cholesterol delivery and inversely related to LDL particles concentration (P < 0.001), and iii) the slow migrating prebeta(1)HDL. Triglyceride level was significantly associated with two fractions: i) the VLDL fraction correlated positively with apoE serum concentration (P < 0.01), and ii) the IDL fraction closely and positively associated with apoC-III-containing lipoprotein level (P < 0.001). Two LDL subfractions were positively related to LDL-cholesterol (0.05 相似文献   

4.
The study was conducted to compare gradient gel electrophoresis (GGE) and zonal ultracentrifugation for quantitation of human plasma high density lipoproteins (HDL). Plasma samples were obtained from seven normal subjects consuming a high fat diet (65% total calories) followed by a high carbohydrate diet (65% total calories). HDL were fractionated into HDL2 and HDL3 by zonal ultracentrifugation and lipid and protein mass were determined. HDL were also fractionated by GGE and the results were compared to the zonal method. Zonally isolated HDL2 represented a homogeneous particle population that was equivalent to HDL2b as determined by GGE. By the zonal method, HDL2 accounted for 27 +/- 4% (mean +/- SEM) of total HDL mass in subjects on the high fat diet as compared to 16 +/- 2% in subjects fed the high carbohydrate diet; by GGE, the HDL2b values were 27 +/- 4% and 14 +/- 1%, respectively. The coefficient of correlation (n = 25) for the two methods was 0.894 (P less than 0.001).  相似文献   

5.
The heterogeneity of serum lipoproteins (excluding very low density (VLDL) and intermediate density (IDL) lipoproteins) and that of lipoproteins secreted by HepG2 cells has been studied by immunoblot analysis of the apolipoprotein composition of the particles separated by polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis (GGE) under nondenaturing conditions. The reactions of antibodies to apoA-I, apoA-II, apoE, apoB, apoD, and apoA-IV have revealed discrete bands of particles which differ widely in size and apolipoprotein composition. GGE of native serum lipoproteins demonstrated that apoA-II is present in lipoproteins of limited size heterogeneity (apparent molecular mass 345,000 to 305,000) and that apoB is present in low density lipoproteins (LDL) and absent from all smaller or denser lipoproteins. In contrast, serum apoA-I, E, D, and A-IV are present in very heterogeneous particles. Serum apoA-I is present mainly in particles of 305 to 130 kDa where it is associated with apoA-II, and in decreasing order of immunoreactivity in particles of 130-90 kDa, 56 kDa, 815-345 kDa, and finally within the size range of LDL, all regions where there is little detectable apoA-II. Serum apoE is present in three defined fractions, one within the size range of LDL, one containing heterogeneous particles between 640 and 345 kDa, and one defined fraction at 96 kDa. Serum apoD is also present in three defined fractions, one comigrating with LDL, one containing heterogeneous particles between 390 and 150 kDa, and one band on the migration front. Most of serum apoA-IV is contained in a band comigrating with albumin. GGE of centrifugally prepared LDL shows the presence of apoB, apoE, and apoD, but not that of apoA-I. However, the particles containing apoA-I, which, in serum, migrated within the LDL size range and as bands of 815 to 345 kDa, were recovered upon centrifugation in the d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction. GGE of high density lipoproteins (HDL) indicated that most of apoA-I, A-II, and A-IV were present in lipoproteins of the same apparent molecular mass (390-152 kDa). ApoD tended to be associated with large HDL, and this was also significant for HDL apoE, which is present in lipoproteins ranging from 640 to 275 kDa. GGE of very high density lipoproteins (VHDL) presented some striking features, one of which was the occurrence of apolipoproteins in very discrete bands of different molecular mass. ApoA-II was bimodally distributed at 250-175 kDa and 175-136 kDa, the latter fraction also containing apoA-I.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Studies were undertaken to investigate potential interactions among plasma lipoproteins. Techniques used were low density lipoprotein2 (LDL2)-ligand blotting of plasma lipoproteins separated by nondenaturing 2.5-15% gradient gel electrophoresis, ligand binding of plasma lipoproteins by affinity chromatography with either LDL2 or lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) as ligands, and agarose lipoprotein electrophoresis. Ligand blotting showed that LDL2 can bind to Lp(a). When apolipoprotein(a) was removed from Lp(a) by reduction and ultracentrifugation, no interaction between LDL2 and reduced Lp(a) was detected by ligand blotting. Ligand binding showed that LDL2-Sepharose 4B columns bound plasma lipoproteins containing apolipoproteins(a), B, and other apolipoproteins. The Lp(a)-Sepharose column bound lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein B and other apolipoproteins. Furthermore, the Lp(a) ligand column bound more lipoprotein lipid than the LDL2 ligand column, with the Lp(a) ligand column having a greater affinity for triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. Lipoprotein electrophoresis of a mixture of LDL2 and Lp(a) demonstrated a single band with a mobility intermediate between that of LDL2 and Lp(a). Chemical modification of the lysine residues of apolipoprotein B (apoB) by either acetylation or acetoacetylation prevented or diminished the interaction of LDL2 with Lp(a), as shown by both agarose electrophoresis and ligand blotting using modified LDL2. Moreover, removal of the acetoacetyl group from the lysine residues of apoB by hydroxylamine reestablished the interaction of LDL2 with Lp(a). On the other hand, blocking of--SH groups of apoB by iodoacetamide failed to show any effect on the interaction between LDL2 and Lp(a). Based on these observations, it was concluded that Lp(a) interacts with LDL2 and other apoB-containing lipoproteins which are enriched in triglyceride; this interaction is due to the presence of apolipoprotein(a) and involves lysine residues of apoB interacting with the plasminogen-like domains (kringle 4) of apolipoprotein(a). Such results suggest that Lp(a) may be involved in triglyceride-rich lipoprotein metabolism, could form transient associations with apoB-containing lipoproteins in the vascular compartment, and alter the intake by the high affinity apoB, E receptor pathway.  相似文献   

7.
We have previously shown that plasma lipoproteins can be separated by analytical capillary isotachophoresis (ITP) according to their electrophoretic mobility in a defined buffer system. As in lipoprotein electrophoresis, HDL show the highest mobility followed by VLDL, IDL, and LDL. Chylomicrons migrate according to their net-charge between HDL and VLDL, because ITP has negligible molecular sieve effects. Three HDL subfractions were obtained which were designated fast-, intermediate-, and slow-migrating HDL. To further characterize these HDL subfractions, a newly developed free-solution ITP (FS-ITP)-system was used, that allows micro-preparative separation of human lipoproteins directly from whole plasma (B?ttcher, A. et al. 1998. Electrophoresis. 19: 1110-1116). The fractions obtained by FS-ITP were analyzed for their lipid and apolipoprotein composition and by two-dimensional nondenaturing polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis (2D-GGE) with subsequent immunoblotting. fHDL are characterized by the highest proportion of esterified cholesterol of all three subfractions and are relatively enriched in LpA-I. Together with iHDL they contain the majority of plasma apoA-I, while sHDL contain the majority of plasma apoA-IV, apoD, apoE, and apoJ. Pre-beta-HDL were found in separate fractions together with triglyceride-rich fractions between sHDL and LDL. In summary, ITP can separate the bulk of HDL into lipoprotein subfractions, which differ in apolipoprotein composition and electrophoretic mobility. While analytical ITP permits rapid separation and quantitation for diagnostic purposes, FS-ITP can be used to obtain these lipoprotein subfractions on a preparative scale for functional analysis. As FS-ITP is much better suited for preparative purposes than gel electrophoresis, it represents an important novel tool for the functional analysis of lipoprotein subclasses.  相似文献   

8.
Plasma lipoproteins from 5-week old male chickens were separated over the density range 1.006-1.172 g/ml into 22 subfractions by isopycnic density gradient ultracentrifugation, in order to establish the distribution of these particles and their constituent apolipoproteins as a function of density. Lipoprotein subfractions were characterized by electrophorectic, chemical and morphological analyses, and their protein moieties were defined according to net charge at alkaline pH, molecular weight and isoelectric point. These analyses have permitted us to reevaluate the density limits of the major chicken lipoprotein classes and to determine their main characteristics, which are as follows: (1) very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL), isolated at d less than 1.016 g/ml, were present at low concentrations (less than 0.1 mg/ml) in fasted birds; their mean diameter determined by gradient gel electrophoresis and by electron microscopy was 20.5 and 31.4 nm respectively; (2) as the the density increased from VLDL to intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL), d 1.016-l.020 g/ml) and low-density lipoproteins (LDL, d 1.020-1.046 g/ml), the lipoprotein particles contained progressively less triacylglycerol and more protein, and their Stokes diameter decreased to 20.0 nm; (3) apolipoprotein B-100 was the major apolipoprotein in lipoproteins of d less than 1.046 g/ml, with an Mr of 350000; small amounts of apolipoprotein B-100 were detectable in HDL subfractions of d less than 1.076 g/ml; urea-soluble apolipoproteins were present in this density range as minor components of Mr 38000-39000, 27000-28000 (corresponding to apolipoprotein A-1) and Mr 11000-12000; (4) high density lipoprotein (HDL, d 1.052-1.130 g/ml) was isolated as a single band, whose protein content increased progressively with increase in density; the chemical composition of HDL resembled that of human HDL2, with apolipoprotein A-1 (M 27000-28000) as the major protein component, and a protein of Mr 11000-12000 as a minor component; (5) heterogeneity was observed in the particle size and apolipoprotein distribution of HDL subfractions: two lipoprotein bands which additional apolipoproteins of Mr 13000 and 15000 were detected. These studies illustrate the inadequacy in the chicken of the density limits applied to fractionate the lipoprotein spectrum, and particularly the inappropriateness of the 1.063 g/ml density limit as the cutoff for LDL and HDL particle populations in the species.  相似文献   

9.
Density gradient ultracentrifugation of human serum high density lipoproteins (HDL) from both normolipemic males and females results in a distribution of HDL concentration versus subfraction hydrated density which has three maxima. Gradient gel electrophoresis of total HDL is characterized by three banding maxima, the positions of which suggest the presence of three particle size ranges: I. 10.8-12.0 nm, II. 9.7-10.7 nm, and III. 8.5-9.6 nm. Gradient gel electrophoresis of density gradient subfractions established an inverse relationship between particle size and particle hydrated density which was corroborated by electron microscopy and analytic ultracentrifugation. Comparison of male HDL from size ranges I, II, and III with female HDL from the same size ranges showed only small differences in the mean value of the peak F degrees 1.20 rate, size, molecular weight, protein weight percent, and weight protein/weight phospholipid. Major differences between males and females were seen in the relative amounts of HDL in density gradient subfractions 1-3 (size range I material) and 11-12 (size range III material); the percent total HDL in the group of subfractions 1-3 was greatly increased in female HDL while that of the group of subfractions 11-12 was increased in the male HDL. These studies indicate the presence of at least three major components in HDL instead of two (HDL2 and HDL3) and that peak F degrees 1.20 rate differences in HDL schlieren patterns between males and females are a function of the relative levels of these three components.  相似文献   

10.
The fractionation and physicochemical characterization of the complex molecular components composing the plasma lipoprotein spectrum in the goose, a potential model of liver steatosis, are described. Twenty lipoprotein subfractions (d less than 1.222 g/ml) were separated by isopycnic density gradient ultracentrifugation, and characterized according to their chemical composition, particle size and particle heterogeneity, electrophoretic mobility, and apolipoprotein content. Analytical ultracentrifugal analyses showed high density lipoproteins (HDL) to predominate (approximately 450 mg/dl plasma), the peak of its distribution occurring at d approximately 1.090 g/ml (F1.21 approximately 2.5). The HDL class displayed marked density heterogeneity, HDL1-like particles being detected up to a lower density limit of approximately 1.020 g/ml, particle size decreasing progressively from 17-19 nm at d 1.024-1.028 g/ml to 10.5-12 nm (d 1.055-1.065 g/ml), and then remaining constant (approximately 9 nm) at densities greater than 1.065 g/ml. HDL subfractions displayed multiple size species; five subspecies were present over the range d 1.103-1.183 g/ml with diameters of 10.5, 9.9, 9.0, 8.2, and 7.5 nm, four in the range d 1.090-1.103 g/ml (diameters 10.5, 9.9, 9.0, and 8.2 nm) and three over the range d 1.076-1.090 g/ml (diameters 10.5, 9.9, and 9.0 nm). ApoA-I (Mr 25,000-27,000) was the major apolipoprotein in all goose HDL subfractions, while the minor components (apparent Mr 100,000, 91,000, 64,000, 58,000, approximately 42,000, 18,000 and apoC-like proteins) showed marked quantitative and qualitative variation across this density range (i.e., 1.055-1.165 g/ml). The d 1.063 g/ml boundary for separation of goose low density lipoproteins (LDL) from HDL was inappropriate, since HDL-like particles were present in the density interval 1.024-1.063 g/ml, while particles enriched in apoB (Mr approximately 540,000) and resembling LDL in size (approximately 20.5 nm) were detected up to a density of approximately 1.076 g/ml. Goose LDL itself was a major component of the profile (90-172 mg/dl) with a single peak of high flotation rate (Sf approximately 10.5). The physicochemical properties and apolipoprotein content of intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL) and LDL varied but little over the range d 1.013-1.040 g/ml, presenting as two particle species (diameters 20.5 and 21 nm) of essentially constant chemical composition; LDL (d 1.019-1.040 g/ml) were separated from HDL1 by gel filtration chromatography and appeared to contain primarily apoB with lesser amounts of apoA-I.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Plasma from individual human subjects is known to contain multiple discrete subpopulations of low (LDL) and intermediate (IDL) density lipoproteins that differ in particle size and density. The metabolic origins of these subpopulations are unknown. Transformation of IDL and larger LDL to smaller, denser LDL particles had been postulated to occur as a result of the combined effects of triglyceride hydrolysis and lipid transfer. However, the presence of multiple small LDL subspecies has been described in patients lacking cholesteryl ester transfer protein. We have characterized an alternative pathway in which size decrements in IDL or LDL are produced in the presence of unesterified fatty acids and a source of apolipoprotein (apo) A-I. Incubation of IDL or LDL subfractions with palmitic acid and either high density lipoproteins (HDL), apoHDL, or purified apoA-I gives rise to apoA-I, apoB-containing complexes that can dissociate into two particles, an apoB-containing lipoprotein with particle diameter 10-30 A smaller than the starting material, and a still smaller species (apparent peak particle diameter 140-190 A) containing lipid and apoA-I but no apoB. The newly formed IDL or LDL are depleted in phospholipid and free cholesterol with no change in apoB-100 as assessed by SDS gel electrophoresis. We hypothesize that this reaction may contribute to the formation of discrete IDL and LDL subpopulations of varying size during the course of hydrolysis of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins in plasma.  相似文献   

12.
Physiological concentrations of oleate stimulate apolipoprotein (apo) B-containing lipoprotein secretion from HepG2 cells without increasing apoB mRNA levels. The purpose of this study was to determine whether oleate acts by increasing translation of apoB mRNA or through posttranslational effects on the apoB protein. To address the mechanism of oleate-stimulated secretion of apoB, a series of carboxyl terminally truncated apoB constructs was made. Each contained the SV40 early promoter, the apoB 5'-untranslated region, and SV40 polyadenylation signals. Any difference in the response to oleate between endogenous apoB and the proteins encoded by the constructs or between the constructs themselves should thus depend on the protein sequence. Stable transformants were established for each of the constructs in the rat hepatoma cell line McArdle-RH7777. The effect of oleate on secretion of the apoB protein products was determined by labeling with [35S]methionine, immunoprecipitation, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Carboxyl-terminal truncation of apoB41 resulted in a loss of the ability of apoB secretion to respond to oleate. Ultracentrifugation of secreted proteins on continuous CsCl gradients from 1.0-1.4 g/ml revealed that this correlated with a decrease in the ability of apoB to be recovered as a buoyant lipoprotein particle. Addition of oleate decreased the densities at which the short forms of apoB secreted as lipoproteins were recovered. Pulse-chase analysis of the secretion of apoB100 and of the truncated proteins revealed that they all underwent rapid posttranslational intracellular degradation. We conclude that oleate has no effect on the translation of apoB mRNA but promotes the secretion of apoB-containing lipoproteins by reducing presecretory degradation of those forms of apoB that can produce buoyant lipoproteins.  相似文献   

13.
A new methodology for the analysis of lipoprotein composition using a combination of gradient ultracentrifugation and high performance liquid chromatography was used to determine the differences in lipoprotein composition between non-hyperlipidemic men and women. Lipoproteins from each subject were separated into six subfractions: VLDL, IDL, LDL, and three subfractions of HDL by a single gradient ultracentrifugation spin of less than 5 hr. The HDL subfractions were designated HDL-L (the lightest density subfraction, rich in apoCs and poor in apoA-II), HDL-M (the middle subfraction, rich in apoA-II), and HDL-D (the most dense, relatively poor in both the apoCs and apoA-II). The concentrations of the water-soluble apolipoproteins in each subfraction were determined using reversed-phase HPLC. The concentrations of apoB and the lipid components of the lipoproteins were determined by chemical and enzymatic methods. This methodology proved to be highly reproducible when performed on fresh plasma samples and we were able to identify many sex-associated differences in lipoprotein composition. This methodology is the only nonimmunological technique available for analyzing lipoprotein composition that offers such a combination of accuracy, speed, and completeness.  相似文献   

14.
High carbohydrate diets are known to increase the concentration of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and to lower the concentrations of low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) in plasma. Such diets also alter lipoprotein compositions and metabolism. The aims of the present study were to assess in detail the effects of a virtually fat-free high carbohydrate (CHO) diet (CHO greater than 85% and fat less than 1% of calories) on various aspects of LDL. Thirteen healthy normolipidemic volunteers ate a basal "American" diet and the CHO diet for 7 days each in a forward or reverse sequence. Fasting blood samples were drawn at the ends of each study period and analyzed for lipoprotein lipid and apolipoprotein concentrations. Compositions of LDL particles isolated by ultracentrifugation were characterized chemically, LDL sizes were assessed by nondenaturing gradient electrophoresis on 2-16% gels, and association and degradation of LDL with normal human skin fibroblasts were quantified in cell cultures. Immunoreactivities of apoB in LDL were tested in solid phase competitive binding radioimmunoassays using five monoclonal anti-LDL antibodies that reacted with defined epitopes of apoB-100. The study diet produced consistent decreases of LDL cholesterol and apoB concentrations by 25% and 17%, respectively. LDL compositions were altered. Mean LDL triglycerides increased 3% to 4% of total LDL mass (P less than 0.004), and LDL particle sizes decreased (P less than 0.01). In radioimmunoassays that contained monoclonal antibody B1B3, an antibody that inhibits binding of LDL to the LDL receptor, the mean ED50 value for LDL protein was reduced from 3.75 to 2.66 micrograms (P less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
A radical reaction of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) causes fragmentation and cross-link of apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB). LDL (50 microg/ml) was subjected to the well-studied oxidation with Cu(2+) (1.67 microM). The concentration of alpha-tocopherol decreased to 10% of the initial level during the first 30 min. After this lag time, the conjugated diene content, as measured by absorption at 234 nm, started increasing and the residual apoB at 512 kDa determined by immunoblot after SDS-PAGE (sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) was also decreased. The particle size of LDL determined by nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis decreased steadily during the initial 120 min, when residual native apoB was only 30% of the initial level. Plasma was also oxidized with Cu(2+) (400 microM). Under this condition, a clear lag time was not observed and alpha-tocopherol content, apoB, and the LDL particle size were decreased simultaneously. Based on these experiments, we propose that an oxidation reaction is involved in the formation of small dense LDL.  相似文献   

16.
Rat and human very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) were fractionated by zonal ultracentrifugation, yielding sharply defined fractions with narrow sedimentation limits. Sedimentation coefficients for the individual fractions were determined at two densities with the analytical ultracentrifuge, and the results were analyzed to yield buoyant densities and molecular weights for the particles in each fraction. For the rat lipoproteins, the weight concentrations of triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipid, and protein were determined for each fraction, and their molar concentrations of apolipoprotein B were measured with a radioimmunoassay. For the human lipoproteins the corresponding values were taken from Patsch et al. (Patsch, W., J. R. Patsch, G. M. Kostner, S. Sailer, and H. Braunsteiner. 1978. Isolation of subfractions of human very low density lipoproteins by zonal ultracentrifugation. J. Biol. Chem. 253:4911-4915). From these data, a ratio of the number of apoB peptides to the number of lipoprotein particles was calculated for each fraction. This ratio was close to 1 for all VLDL fractions, ranging in particle diameter from about 40 to 80 mm and 30 to 50 mm, respectively, for rat and human VLDL. The majority rat VLDL contain B-48 rather than B-100 as their (single) apoB peptide. Based on these data, we proposed that only a single copy of B-48 is required for VLDL assembly in rat liver, unless nascent hepatic VLDL contain additional apoB peptides which are uniformly lost from the plasma VLDL particles when they are analyzed.  相似文献   

17.
A total of six established human hepatoma-derived cell lines, including Hep3B, NPLC/PRF/5 (NPLC), Tong/HCC, Hep 10, huH1, and huH2, were screened for their ability to accumulate significant quantities of lipoproteins in serum-free medium. Only two cell lines, Hep3B and NPLC, secreted quantitatively significant amounts of lipoproteins. In a 24-h period the accumulated mass of apolipoproteins (apo) A-I, A-II, B, and E and albumin for Hep3B cells was 1.96, 1.01, 1.96, 1.90, and 53.2 micrograms/mg cell protein per 24 h, respectively. NPLC cells secreted no detectable albumin but the 24-h accumulated mass for apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, B, and E was 0.45, 0.05, 0.32, and 0.68 micrograms/mg cell protein per 24 h, respectively. Twenty four-hour serum-free medium of Hep3B cells contained lipoproteins corresponding to the three major density classes of plasma; percent protein distribution among the lipoprotein classes was 4%, 41%, and 56% for very low density lipoprotein ("VLDL"), low density lipoprotein ("LDL"), and high density lipoprotein ("HDL"), respectively. NPLC was unusual since most of the lipoprotein mass was in the d 1.063-1.235 g/ml range. Hep3B "LDL", compared with plasma LDL, contained elevated triglyceride, phospholipid, and free cholesterol. Nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis revealed that Hep3B "LDL" possessed a major component at 25.5 nm and a minor one at 18.3 nm. Immunoblots showed that the former contained only apoB while the latter possessed only apoE. Like plasma VLDL, Hep3B "VLDL" particles (30.5 nm diameter) isolated from serum-free medium contained apoB, apoC, and apoE. "HDL" harvested from Hep3B and NPLC medium were enriched in phospholipid and free cholesterol and poor cholesteryl ester which is similar to the composition of HepG2 "HDL." "HDL" from Hep3B and NPLC culture medium on gradient gel electrophoresis had peaks at 7.5, 10, and 11.9 nm which were comparable to major components found in HepG2 cell medium. Hep3B cells, in addition, possessed a particle that banded at 8.2 nm which appeared to be an apoA-II without apoA-I particle by Western blot analysis. The cell line also produced a subpopulation of larger-sized "HDL" not found in HepG2 medium. NPLC "HDL" had a distinct peak at 8.3 nm which by Western blot was an apoE-only particle. Electron microscopy revealed that "HDL" harvested from Hep3B and NPLC medium consisted of discoidal and small, spherical particles like those of HepG2. The "HDL" apolipoprotein content of each cell line was distinct from that of HepG2. ApoA-II at 35% of apolipoprotein distinguishes Hep3B "HDL" from HepG2, which contains only 10%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Fractionation of human blood plasma low density lipoproteins (LDL) was performed by ion-exchange chromatography, using a linear NaCl gradient. It was shown that the binding of LDL subfractions eluted with a low ionic strength buffer (i.e., containing the particles with a lower negative charge) to B, E-receptors of fibroblasts was more effective than that of subfractions eluted with a high ionic strength buffer (i.e., containing the particles with a higher negative charge). The LDL particles with a lower negative charge had lower values of flotation coefficients (according to analytical ultracentrifugation data), smaller dimensions (according to gradient gel electrophoresis data) and a lower phospholipid/protein ratio (w/w). The experimental results suggest that LDL subfractions having different electrical parameters of the particle surface also differ in other physicochemical properties and seem to play a different role in atherogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
Distribution of apolipoprotein A-IV in human plasma   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Human apoA-IV was purified from delipidated urinary chylomicrons. Monospecific antibodies were raised in rabbits and used to develop a double antibody radioimmunoassay (RIA). Displacement of 125I-labeled apoA-IV by plasma or purified chylomicron apoA-IV resulted in parallel displacement curves, indicating that apoA-IV from both sources share common antigenic determinants. The apoA-IV level in plasma from normal healthy fasting male subjects (n = 5) was 37.4 +/- 4.0 mg/dl, while fat-feeding increased the level to 49.1 +/- 7.9 mg/dl (P less than 0.05) at 4 hr. The apoA-IV level in plasma from abetalipoproteinemic fasting subjects was 13.7 +/- 3.1 mg/dl (n = 5). Plasma from a single fasting Tangier subject showed a reduced apoA-IV level of 21.1 mg/dl. The distribution of apoA-IV in fasting and postprandial plasma was determined by 6% agarose gel chromatography. Fifteen to 25% of plasma apoA-IV eluted in the region of plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL), with the remainder eluting in subsequent column fractions. In abetalipoproteinemic plasma this HDL fraction is reduced and lacks apoA-IV, suggesting that at least some of the apoA-IV on these particles is normally derived from triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. Lipemic plasma from a fat-fed subject showed a small rise (3%) in chylomicron-associated apoA-IV. Gel-filtered HDL and subsequent apoA-IV-containing fractions were subjected to 4-30% polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis (4/30 GGE), and apoA-IV was identified by immunolocalization following transfer of proteins to nitrocellulose paper. In normal plasma apoA-IV was localized throughout all HDL fractions. In addition, normal plasma contained apoA-IV localized in a small particle (diameter 7.8-8.0 nm). This particle also contained apoA-I and lipid. A markedly elevated saturated to unsaturated cholesteryl ester ratio was present in gel-filtered plasma fractions containing small HDL, suggesting an intracellular origin of these particles. In abetalipoproteinemic plasma apoA-IV was absent from all HDL fractions except for the small HDL particles, suggesting that they are not derived from the surface of triglyceride-rich particles. All plasmas contained free apoA-IV. In contrast to gel-filtered plasma, lipoprotein subfractions of fasted normal plasma prepared in the ultracentrifuge primarily contained apoA-IV in the d greater than 1.26 g/ml fraction, suggesting an artifactual redistribution of the apolipoprotein during centrifugation. Overall, these data suggest that apoA-IV secretion into plasma is increased with fat feeding, and that apoA-IV normally exists as both a free apolipoprotein and in association with HDL particles.  相似文献   

20.
A micro-enzymatic method was developed to measure total cholesterol (CHOL) and triglyceride (TG) in lipoproteins and their subfractions separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation. This method had a detection limit and sensitivity below 2 mg/dl and accuracy (bias to reference sera) and imprecision (coefficient of variation) of less than 3% between 2 and 30 mg/dl for both CHOL and TG. In addition, the method was in good agreement with standardized Abell-Kendall CHOL (r = 0.98) and enzymatic TG (r = 0.99) methods. Lipoproteins from 200 microliters of plasma or serum were separated by either equilibrium (EQ)- or rate zonal (RZ)-density gradient ultracentrifugation and the resulting fractions were analyzed for CHOL and TG by the micro-enzymatic method. Lipoprotein measurements by these micro-enzymatic/density gradient methods were highly correlated with standardized Lipid Research Clinic (LRC) procedures and preparative ultracentrifugation. The EQ-density gradient procedure also allowed determination of CHOL and TG in LDL and HDL subfractions within any desired density interval. These methods will facilitate the measurements and study of lipoproteins and their subfractions especially in infants, children, the elderly, and small animals. In addition, the micro-enzymatic method may be adapted to other modes of lipoprotein separation such as liquid chromatography, electrophoresis, and precipitation. CHOL or TG determinations could be made on approximately 500 density gradient fractions per hour.  相似文献   

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