首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Complexes of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine and apolipoprotein A-I were prepared by a detergent (sodium cholate)-dialysis method and characterized by gradient gel electrophoresis, gel filtration, electron microscopy and chemical analysis. Multicomponent electrophoretic patterns were obtained indicating formation of at least eight classes of discoidal complexes. The relative contribution of the different classes to the electrophoretic pattern was a function of the molar ratio of phosphatidylcholine:apolipoprotein A-I in the interaction mixture. Molar ratios of phosphatidylcholine:apolipoprotein A-I in isolated complexes were strongly and positively correlated with disc diameter obtained by electron microscopy. Incorporation of unesterified cholesterol into phosphatidylcholine/apolipoprotein A-I interaction mixtures also resulted in formation of unique complexes but with considerably different particle size distributions relative to those observed in the absence of cholesterol. One common consequence of cholesterol incorporation into interaction mixtures of 87.5:1 and 150:1 molar ratio of phosphatidylcholine:apolipoprotein A-I was the disappearance of a major complex class with diameter of 10.8 nm and the appearance of a major component with diameter of approximately 8.8 nm. Electrophoretic patterns of cholesterol-containing complexes showed a strong similarity to patterns recently published for high density lipoproteins from plasma of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase-deficient subjects, suggesting that the complexes formed in vitro by the detergent-dialysis method may serve as appropriate models for investigation of the origins of the HDL particle size distribution.  相似文献   

2.
The preparation of discoidal, recombinant HDL (r-HDL) containing various phospholipids, apolipoproteins and a range of concentrations of unesterified cholesterol has been reported by several investigators. The present study describes the preparation of r-HDL containing both apolipoprotein (apo) A-I and apo A-II. r-HDL with 100:1 (mol:mol) egg PC.apo A-I and 0 (Series I), 5 (Series II) or 10 (Series III) mol% unesterified cholesterol were prepared by the cholate dialysis method. The resulting complexes had a Stokes' radius of 4.7 nm and contained two molecules of apo A-I per particle. When the r-HDL (2.0 mg apo A-I) were supplemented with 1.0 mg of apo A-II, one of the apo A-I molecules was replaced by two molecules of apo A-II. This modification was not accompanied by a loss of phospholipid, nor by major change in particle size. The addition of 2.5 or 4.0 mg of apo A-II resulted in the displacement of both apo A-I molecules from a proportion of the r-HDL and the formation of smaller particles (Stokes' radius 3.9 nm), which contained half the original number of egg PC molecules and three molecules of apo A-II. The amount of apo A-I displaced was dependent on the concentration of unesterified cholesterol in the r-HDL: when 2.5 mg of apo A-II was added to the Series I, II and III r-HDL, 44, 60 and 70%, respectively, of the apo A-I was displaced. Addition of 4.0 mg of apo A-II did not promote further displacement of apo A-I from any of the r-HDL. By contrast, the association of apo A-II with r-HDL was independent of the concentration of unesterified cholesterol and was a linear function of the amount of apo A-II which had been added. It is concluded that (1), the structural integrity of egg PC.unesterified cholesterol.apo A-I r-HDL, which contain two molecules of apo A-I, is not affected when one of the apo A-I molecules is replaced by two molecules of apo A-II; (2), when both apo A-I molecules are replaced by apo A-II, small particles which contain three molecules of apo A-II are formed; and (3), the displacement of apo A-I from r-HDL is facilitated by the presence of unesterified cholesterol in the particles.  相似文献   

3.
Micellar, discoidal complexes were prepared from L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) or egg phosphatidylcholine (egg-PC), cholesterol, and human apolipoprotein A-I by the cholate dialysis method. Reaction mixtures containing from 70:7:1 to 500:50:1, PC/cholesterol/apolipoprotein A-I (mol/mol) were fractionated by gel-filtration into various complex fractions. The isolated DPPC complexes ranged in size from 103 to 380 A in diameter, and in composition from 70:7:1 to 470:45:1, PC/cholesterol/apolipoprotein A-I (mol/mol), respectively. In contrast, the isolated egg-PC complexes only ranged in size from 105 to 214 A in diameter, and in composition from 65:5:1 to 153:17:1, PC/cholesterol/apolipoprotein A-I (mol/mol), respectively. Measurements of fluorescence wavelength maxima and fluorescence polarization of tryptophan residues of apolipoprotein A-I, in both series of complexes, revealed uniform spectral properties for all the egg-PC containing complexes. The DPPC complexes, on the other hand, had maxima in the fluorescence parameters for complexes with diameters around 200 A. When reacted with purified human lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase, either at constant apolipoprotein A-I or at constant lipid concentration, all egg-PC complexes had very similar reaction rates, but the DPPC complex series exhibited major differences in reactivity. Minima in reaction rates occurred for DPPC complexes around 200 A in diameter, and optimal rates were observed with the small discoidal complexes (110 A in diameter). These reaction rates correlate well with the apolipoprotein A-I fluorescence properties and indicate that the apolipoprotein structure, reflected at the interface with phosphatidylcholine, may be the most important factor in determining complex reactivity with lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase.  相似文献   

4.
The lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT)-induced transformation of two discrete species of model complexes that differ in number of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) molecules per particle was investigated. One complex species (designated 3A-I(UC)-complexes) contained 3 apoA-I per particle, was discoidal (13.5 X 4.4 nm), and had a molar composition of 22:78:1 (unesterified cholesterol (UC):egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (egg yolk PC):apoA-I). The other complex species (designated 2A-I(UC)complexes) containing 2 apoA-I per particle was also discoidal (8.4 X 4.1 nm) and had a molar composition of 6:40:1. Transformation of 3A-I(UC)complexes by partially purified LCAT yielded a product (24 hr, 37 degrees C) with a cholesteryl ester (CE) core, 3 apoA-I, and a mean diameter of 9.2 nm. The 2A-I(UC)complexes were only partially transformed to a core-containing product (24 hr, 37 degrees C) which also had 3 apoA-I; this product, however, was smaller (diameter of 8.5 nm) than the product from 3A-I(UC)complexes. Transformation of 3A-I(UC)complexes appeared to result from build-up of core CE directly within the precursor complex. Transformation of 2A-I(UC)complexes, however, followed a stepwise pathway to the product with 3 apoA-I, apparently involving fusion of transforming precursors and release of one apoA-I from the fusion product. In the presence of low density lipoprotein (LDL), used as a source of additional cholesterol, conversion of 2A-I(UC)complexes to the product with 3 apoA-I was more extensive. The transformation product of 3A-I(UC)complexes in the presence of LDL also had 3 apoA-I but was considerably smaller in size (8.6 vs. 9.2 nm, diameter) and had a twofold lower molar content of PC compared with the product formed without LDL. LDL appeared to act both as a donor of UC and an acceptor of PC. Transformation products with 3 apoA-I obtained under the various experimental conditions in the present studies appear to be constrained in core CE content (between 13 to 22 CE per apoA-I; range of 9 CE molecules) but relatively flexible in content of surface PC molecules they can accommodate (between 24 to 49 PC per apoA-I; range of 25 PC molecules). The properties of the core-containing products with 3 apoA-I compare closely with those of the major subpopulation of human plasma HDL in the size range of 8.2-8.8 nm that contains the molecular weight equivalent of 3 apoA-I molecules.  相似文献   

5.
The four peptide analogs of the amphipathic helix whose interactions with dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine were described in the preceding paper were compared with apolipoproteins (apo) A-I and A-II in ability to displace native apolipoprotein from high density lipoprotein (HDL) and in ability to activate lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase. The rank order of the ability of the four peptide analogs to displace apo-A-I from intact HDL was 18A-Pro-18A greater than 18A greater than des-Val10-18A greater than reverse-18A, the same order suggested in the preceding paper for relative lipid affinities. Modified HDL from which 40% of the apo-A-I had been displaced by 18A was indistinguishable from unmodified HDL in its ability to act as a lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase substrate. This suggests that the easily displaced apo-A-I molecules in polydisperse HDL are relatively ineffectual as lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activators and/or 18A replaces the lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity lost. The peptide analog 18A-Pro-18A was found to be a powerful activator of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase when incubated with unilamellar egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles, reaching 140% of the activity of apo-A-I at a 1:1.75 peptide-to-egg PC ratio. In another experiment, it was found that discoidal egg PC complexes of 18A-Pro-18A, 18A, and des-Val10-18A, formed by cholate dialysis, had 30-45% of the activity of apo-A-I/egg PC discoidal complexes, also formed by cholate dialysis, at the same peptide/lipid weight ratio. Examination of the structures formed when the 18A-Pro-18A peptide was incubated with unilamellar egg PC vesicles indicated that the ability of 18A-Pro-18A to exceed apo-A-I in lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activating ability is due to the spontaneous conversion by 18A-Pro-18A of egg PC vesicles to small protein annulus-bilayer disc structures. Apo-A-I, apo-A-II, nor any of the other three peptide analogs of the amphipathic helix studied were able to convert a significant fraction of egg PC unilamellar vesicles to discoidal structures.  相似文献   

6.
In this study we demonstrate that apolipoprotein A-I determined the common size classes of discoidal particles formed with numerous phosphatidylcholines, and with ether analogs of phosphatidylcholines. We show furthermore, that the nature of the lipids dictates the distribution of particles among the different size classes. These experiments were performed with discoidal complexes containing various phospholipids (phosphatidylcholines with saturated and unsaturated fatty acid chains of different lengths and the ether analog of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine), cholesterol, and human apolipoprotein A-I, prepared by the sodium cholate dialysis method, and fractionated by Bio-Gel A-5m gel-filtration chromatography. The complex preparations were analyzed in terms of their average composition, spectral properties of the apolipoprotein, and the dynamic behavior of the lipid domains. Nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis was used to analyze the size classes of particles present in the complex preparations. Starting with reaction mixtures containing around 100:1, phospholipid/apolipoprotein A-I molar ratios, complexes were isolated with molar ratios from 40:1 to 100:1. In most complexes apolipoprotein A-I had high levels of alpha-helical structure (65-77% alpha-helix), and tryptophan residues in a nonpolar environment. The lipid domains of complexes exhibited the dynamic behavior expected of the main phospholipid components. In the average size range from 90 to 100 A diameters, discrete particle classes with 80, 87, 102, 108, or 112 A Stokes diameters were observed for all the complexes containing different phospholipids. These discrete, recurring particle sizes are attributed to distinct apolipoprotein A-I conformations and variable lipid content.  相似文献   

7.
Role of apolipoproteins in cellular cholesterol efflux   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of serum apolipoproteins, particle size and concentration on the effectiveness of phosphatidylcholine (PC)-containing acceptor particles in causing release of cholesterol from cells growing in culture have been investigated. The acceptor particles were prepared by detergent-dialysis procedures and were either egg PC small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) or discoidal complexes of egg PC with apoproteins from human high-density lipoprotein (HDL). Gel filtration chromatography was employed to isolate particles of defined composition and size. The half-times (t 1/2) for the unidirectional efflux of cholesterol from cells prelabeled with [3H]cholesterol were measured as a function of acceptor PC concentration in the extracellular medium. HDL apolipoprotein-egg PC discoidal complexes at 100 micrograms PC/ml gave the following t 1/2 values when incubated with rat Fu5AH hepatoma, human HepG2 hepatoma, human GM3468 skin fibroblast, L-cell and mouse J774 macrophage-tumor cells: 11 +/- 2, 22 +/- 5, 84 +/- 18, 17 +/- 2 and 32 +/- 6 h, respectively. Equivalent experiments using purified apolipoprotein A-I or the total apolipoprotein C fraction to form the egg PC complexes showed that the t 1/2 values for the hepatoma cells were unaltered. However, with the fibroblasts, L-cells and J774 macrophages, the apolipoprotein C complexes gave significantly longer t 1/2 than complexes of egg PC with either apolipoprotein A-I or HDL apolipoprotein which gave the same t 1/2. An analysis based on the theory of fast coagulation of colloid particles to describe collisions between desorbed cholesterol molecules and acceptor particles predicts that the dependence of t 1/2 for cholesterol efflux from a given cell to different acceptors should be normalized when the extracellular level of acceptors is expressed in terms of the product of the radius of the particle times the number concentration of acceptor particles. The decrease in t 1/2 for cholesterol efflux from fibroblasts when the egg PC acceptor was changed from an SUV to an apolipoprotein HDL discoidal complex is consistent with the above concepts. The primary effect of the apolipoproteins in promoting cellular cholesterol efflux seems to be the solubilization of PC so that the PC is present in the extracellular medium as many small particles.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of plasma components on the particle size distribution and chemical composition of human plasma low-density lipoproteins (LDL) during interaction with discoidal complexes of human apolipoprotein A-I and phosphatidylcholine (PC) was investigated. Incubation (37 degrees C, 1 h and 6 h) of LDL with discoidal complexes in the presence of the plasma ultracentrifugal d greater than 1.20 g/ml fraction (activity of lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase inhibited) produces an increase in LDL apparent particle diameter two-to six-fold greater than that observed in the absence of the plasma d greater than 1.20 g/ml fraction. In incubation mixtures of LDL and discoidal complexes, both in the presence and absence of the plasma d greater than 1.20 g/ml fraction, the extent of LDL apparent particle diameter increase is: (1) approximately three-fold greater at 6 h than at 1 h, and (2) markedly greater for LDL with initially small (22.4-24.0 nm) major components than for LDL with initially large (26.2-26.8 nm) major components. The facilitation factor in the plasma d greater than 1.20 g/ml fraction is not plasma phospholipid transfer protein. Purified human serum albumin produces an apparent particle diameter increase comparable to the plasma d greater than 1.20 g/ml fraction. The discoidal complex-induced increase in LDL apparent particle diameter value by albumin is associated with an increase in phospholipid uptake by LDL and a decreased loss of LDL unesterified cholesterol. In preliminary experiments, high-density lipoproteins (HDL) reverse the apparent particle diameter increase originally induced by discoidal complexes. The presence of HDL (HDL phospholipid/LDL phospholipid molar ratio of 10:1) in the incubation (6 h) mixture of LDL and discoidal complexes also attenuates LDL apparent particle diameter increase. In vivo, the plasma LDL/HDL ratio may be a controlling factor in determining the extent to which phospholipid uptake and the associated change in LDL particle size distribution occurs.  相似文献   

9.
It has been reported previously that the particle size distribution of discoidal, reconstituted HDL (r-HDL) changes dramatically during incubation in vitro with cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP). The present study was undertaken in order to determine whether these changes are influenced by the apolipoprotein composition of the r-HDL. Two preparations of r-HDL that contained egg phosphatidylcholine (egg PC) and unesterified cholesterol (UC) but differed in their apolipoprotein composition were used for the study. One preparation contained apolipoprotein (apo) A-I only (A-I w/o A-II r-HDL) while the other contained apoA-I and apoA-II (A-I w A-II r-HDL). The Stokes' radius of the major population of particles in the (A-I w/o A-II) and (A-I w A-II) r-HDL was, respectively, 4.8 and 4.9 nm. When the (A-I w/o A-II) r-HDL were incubated with CETP, most of the particles of radius 4.8 nm were converted to populations of smaller and larger particles. The smaller particles had Stokes' radii of 4.3 and 3.9 nm. The radii of the larger particles ranged from 8.2 to 13.7 nm. When the (A-I w A-II) r-HDL were incubated with CETP larger particles (Stokes' radii = 8.4-11.0 nm) appeared but there was minimal conversion to smaller particles. In addition, a significant proportion of the original (A-I w A-II) r-HDL of radius 4.9 nm was still present at the end of the incubation. These results are consistent with apoA-II inhibiting the conversion of r-HDL to small particles. It is concluded that the apolipoprotein content of r-HDL is an important determinant of the sizes of the particles that are formed during incubation with CETP.  相似文献   

10.
Using a cholate-dialysis recombination procedure, complexes of apolipoprotein A-I and synthetic phosphatidylcholine (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) or dioleoylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC] were prepared in mixtures at a relatively high molar ratio of 150:1 phosphatidylcholine/apolipoprotein A-I. Particle size distribution analysis by gradient gel electrophoresis of the recombinant mixtures indicated the presence of a series of discrete complexes that included species migrating at RF values observed for discoidal particles in nascent high-density lipoproteins (HDL) in plasma of lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase-deficient subjects. One of these complex species, designated complex class 6, formed with either phosphatidylcholine, was isolated by gel filtration and characterized at follows: discoidal shape (mean diameter 20.8 nm (POPC) and 19.0 nm (DOPC]; molar ratio, phosphatidylcholine/apolipoprotein A-I, 155:1 (POPC) and 130:1 (DOPC); and both containing 4 molecules of apolipoprotein A-I per particle. Incubation of class 6 complexes with lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.43) and a source of unesterified cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein (LDL] was shown by electron microscopy to result in a progressive transformation of the discoidal particles (0 h) to deformable (2.5 h) and to spherical particles (24 h). The spherical particles (diameter 13.6 nm (POPC) and 12.5 nm (DOPC) exhibit sizes at the upper boundary of the interval defining the human plasma (HDL2b)gge (12.9-9.8 nm). The spherical particles contain a cholesteryl ester core that reaches a limiting molar ratio of approx. 50-55:1 cholesteryl ester/apolipoprotein A-I. The deformable particles assume a rectangular shape under negative staining and, relative to the 24-h spherical product, are enriched in phosphatidylcholine. Chemical crosslinking (by dimethyl suberimidate) of the isolated transformation products shows the 24-h spherical particle to contain predominantly 4 apolipoprotein A-I molecules; products produced after intermediate periods of time appear to contain species with 3 and 4 apolipoproteins per particle. Our in vitro studies indicate a potential pathway in the origins of large, apolipoprotein A-I-containing plasma HDL particles. The deformable species observed during transformation were similar in size and shape to particles observed in interstitial fluid.  相似文献   

11.
Discoidal substrates for purified human lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase were prepared with human apolipoprotein A-I, cholesterol, and egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) or dipalmitoyl PC, including dihexadecyl PC in various proportions as an enzymatically inert dilutor of the interfacial PC substrate. All the complexes, prepared by the sodium cholate dialysis method, were found to be very similar in size, lipid/apolipoprotein stoichiometry, and apolipoprotein spectral properties to the small discoidal complexes without any dihexadecyl PC, described previously (Jonas, A., and Matz, C.E. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6867-6872; Jonas, A., and McHugh, H. T. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 794, 361-372). The kinetic results presented in the form of double reciprocal plots of initial velocity against bulk PC or interfacial PC concentration were linear according to the Verger et al. kinetic model (Verger, R., Mieras, M. C. E., and de Haas, G. H. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4023-4034) for an initial enzyme binding via an interfacial recognition site followed by interfacial substrate binding and catalysis, in the presence of a competitive interfacial inhibitor. The results indicate, furthermore, that the affinity of the active site for the substrate and inhibitor is quite similar.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Complexes formed between apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) or egg phosphatidylcholine have been studied by high-field 1H NMR, nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, electron microscopy, and gel filtration chromatography. Emphasis has been placed on an analysis of the particle size distribution within the micellar complexes produced at lipid/protein molar ratios of 40-700. As determined by electron microscopy and gel filtration of DMPC/apo A-I complexes, the size of the discoidal micelles produced appears to increase uniformly with an increasing lipid/protein ratio. By electron microscopy, the diameters of isolated DMPC/apo A-I discoidal micelles range from approximately 89 A at a 40 molar ratio to 205 A at a 700 molar ratio. Analysis of the micellar complexes by 1H NMR shows that concomitant with the increase in size is the progressive downfield shift of the choline N-methyl proton resonance of the complex which is observed from 3.245 to 3.267 ppm over the above molar ratio range. The relationship between chemical shift and micelle size is most simply interpreted as arising from a weighted averaging of two lipid environments--lipid-lipid and lipid-protein. In contrast to the above interpretation of the gel filtration experiments on DMPC/apo A-I complexes, nondenaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of particle size distribution leads to an unexpected observation: as the DMPC/apo A-I ratio increases, discrete complexes of increasing size are formed in an apparently quantized manner.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Micellar, discoidal complexes of human apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, C-I, C-II, C-III-1, and C-III-2 with egg phosphatidylcholine (egg-PC) and cholesterol were prepared by the cholate dialysis method. The complexes, isolated by gel filtration, had similar lipid and protein contents by weight, on the average: 1.77:0.083:1.0, egg-PC/cholesterol/apolipoprotein (w/w). The diameters of the discs, visualized by electron microscopy and estimated by gel filtration, ranged from 100 to 200 A. The alpha-helix content of the apolipoproteins in the complexes was from 50-72%, and their fluorescence properties indicated nonpolar, but quite varied environments for the tryptophan residues in the various complexes. Initial reactions of purified human lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase with the complexes, adjusted to equal egg-PC concentrations, indicated that all the apolipoproteins activate the enzyme from 6-fold to 400-fold over control vesicles of egg-PC and cholesterol. In decreasing order of reactivity were the complexes with A-I, C-I, C-III-1, C-III-2, C-II, and A-II. These results indicate that aside from lipid-binding capacity and high amphipathic alpha-helix content, other structural features are required for optimal enzyme activation by apolipoproteins. Concentration and temperature dependence experiments gave similar apparent Km values, markedly different apparent Vmax, and very similar activation energies (about 19 kcal/mol), for the various complexes. These observations suggest that the rate-limiting enzymatic step of the reaction is common to all the complexes but that the activated enzyme levels differ from complex to complex. We propose that enzyme activation occurs upon binding to complexes via apolipoproteins. Addition of excess (5-fold) free apolipoprotein A-I or A-II to complexes resulted in the exchange of bound for free apolipoproteins and in loss of reactivity with the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Incubation (24 h, 37 degrees C) of discoidal complexes of phosphatidylcholine and apolipoprotein A-I (molar ratio 95 +/- 10 egg yolk phosphatidylcholine-apolipoprotein A-I; 10.5 X 4.0 nm, long X short dimension; designated, class 3 complexes) with the ultracentrifugal d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction transformed the discoidal complexes to a small product with apparent mean hydrated and nonhydrated diameter of 7.8 and 6.6 nm, respectively. Formation of the small product was associated with marked reduction in phosphatidylcholine-apolipoprotein AI molar ratio of the complexes (on average from 95:1 to 45:1). Phospholipase A2 activity of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase participated in the depletion process, as evidenced by production of unesterified fatty acids. In the presence of the d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction or partially purified lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase and a source of unesterified cholesterol, the small product could be transformed to a core-containing (cholesteryl ester) round product with a hydrated and nonhydrated diameter of 8.6 and 7.5 nm, respectively. By means of cross-linking with dimethylsuberimidate, the protein moiety of the small product was shown to contain primarily two apolipoprotein A-I molecules per particle, while the large product contained three apolipoprotein A-I molecules per particle. The increase in number of apolipoprotein A-I molecules per particle during transformation of the small to the large product appeared to result from fusion of the small particles during core build-up and release of excess apolipoprotein A-I from the fusion product. The results obtained with the model complexes were consistent for the most part with recent observations (Chen, C., Applegate, K., King, W.C., Glomset, J.A., Norum, K.R. and Gjone, E. (1984) J. Lipid Res. 25, 269-282) on the transformation, by lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase, of the small spherical high-density lipoproteins of patients with familial lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency.  相似文献   

16.
The primary objectives of this study were to determine whether analogs to native discoidal apolipoprotein (apo)E-containing high-density lipoproteins (HDL) could be prepared in vitro, and if so, whether their conversion by lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT; EC 2.3.1.43) produced particles with properties comparable to those of core-containing, spherical, apoE-containing HDL in human plasma. Complexes composed of apoE and POPC, without and with incorporated unesterified cholesterol, were prepared by the cholate-dialysis technique. Gradient gel electrophoresis showed that these preparations contain discrete species both within (14-40 nm) and outside (10.8-14 nm) the size range of discoidal apoE-containing HDL reported in LCAT deficiency. The isolated complexes were discoidal particles whose size directly correlated with their POPC:apoE molar ratio: increasing this ratio resulted in an increase in larger complexes and a reduction in smaller ones. At all POPC:apoE molar ratios, size profiles included a major peak corresponding to a discoidal complex 14.4 nm long. Preparations with POPC:apoE molar ratios greater than 150:1 contained two distinct groups of complexes, also in the size range of discoidal apoE-containing HDL from patients with LCAT deficiency. Incorporation of unesterified cholesterol into preparations (molar ratio of 0.5:1, unesterified cholesterol:POPC) resulted in component profiles exhibiting a major peak corresponding to a discoidal complex 10.9 nm long. An increase of unesterified cholesterol and POPC (at the 0.5:1 molar ratio) in the initial mixture, increased the proportion of larger complexes in the profile. Incubation of isolated POPC-apoE discoidal complexes (mean sizes, 14.4 and 23.9 nm) with purified LCAT and a source of unesterified cholesterol converted the complexes to spherical, cholesteryl ester-containing products with mean diameters of 11.1 nm and 14.0 nm, corresponding to apoE-containing HDL found in normal plasma. Conversion of smaller cholesterol-containing discoidal complexes (mean size, 10.9 nm) under identical conditions resulted in spherical products 11.3, 13.3, and 14.7 nm across. The mean sizes of these conversion products compared favorably with those (mean diameter, 12.3 nm) of apoE-containing HDL of human plasma. This conversion of cholesterol-containing complexes is accompanied by a shift of some apoE to the LDL particle size interval. Our study indicates that apoE-containing complexes formed by the cholate-dialysis method include species similar to discoidal apoE-containing HDL and that incubation with LCAT converts most of them to spherical core-containing particles in the size range of plasma apoE-containing HDL. Plasma HDL particles containing apoE may arise in part from direct conversion of discoidal apoE-containing HDL by LCAT.  相似文献   

17.
Soybean triacylglycerol particles, stabilized with egg yolk sphingomyelin (SPH), phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), or PC-PE mixtures, with diameters ranging from 170 to 550 nm were prepared by sonication and isolated by ultracentrifugation. Binding of apoproteins to the lipid particles was studied in vivo using the strategy of Connelly and Kuksis. The recoveries of the injected particles, which had decreased in size and undergone minimal changes in lipid composition, ranged from 70% and 57% for SPH- and PC-stabilized particles to 14% for particles stabilized with egg yolk PC-PE mixtures. The apoprotein (apo) composition of the recovered particles showed qualitative and quantitative differences, which were affected by the number of washes during isolation. After four washes, the SPH and PC particles contained apoE, apoC-II, and apoC-III as major components and apoA-IV as minor components. In addition, all particles, except those stabilized with egg yolk PC, contained large amounts of albumin. In contrast to egg yolk PC, the dipalmitoyl PC particles bound albumin as a major component. The recovered PC-PE and PE particles were characterized by a relative decrease of apoC and greatly increased binding of albumin. The higher rate of clearance of the PE-containing particles was attributed to a relative absence of apoC-III, which is known to delay hepatic uptake of lipid particles containing it, and to a more rapid hydrolysis of PE by lipoprotein lipases. Since PE occurs as a minor and variable component of chylomicrons and plasma lipoproteins, the present observations are of physiological interest.  相似文献   

18.
Interaction of human low-density lipoproteins (LDL) with discoidal complexes comprised of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine and human apolipoprotein A-I (molar ratio, 88:1, respectively) was investigated. The multicomponent gradient gel electrophoretic pattern of LDL is transformed to one that includes a predominant component with an apparent particle diameter larger than that of the initial major LDL but still in the size range of normal LDL. The apparent particle diameter increase (range, 0.2-3.5 nm) is proportional to the increase (range, 6-40%) in LDL phospholipid/protein weight ratio following incubation (37 degrees C; 6 and 24 h); the smaller the initial LDL diameter, the greater the apparent particle diameter increase and percentage of phospholipid uptake. The LDL unesterified cholesterol/protein weight ratio decreases (range, 33-39%), but does not correlate with the increase in apparent particle diameter value. Interaction products are round particles with intact apolipoprotein B and show no evidence of phospholipid degradation. The products appear more dense than expected from the size vs. density relationship observed for nonincubated LDL subspecies. In addition to products in the normal LDL size range, larger components (apparent particle diameter range, 29.0-41.2 nm) also form and may be association complexes of phospholipid-modified LDL. Our results indicate that phospholipid uptake by LDL may contribute to the particle size polydispersity observed in plasma LDL.  相似文献   

19.
High density lipoproteins (HDL) from 14 patients with obstructive jaundice were examined by gradient gel electrophoresis to determine the effect of obstruction on particle size distribution. HDL from 7 of these patients were fractionated by gel permeation chromatography and further characterized by electron microscopy, SDS gel electrophoresis, apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein A-II immunoturbidimetry, and analysis of chemical composition. In addition, lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity was measured and correlated with plasma apolipoprotein A-I concentration and particle size distribution. HDL were abnormal in all patients regardless of severity, cause, or duration of obstruction. The major HDL subfraction in normal subjects, HDL3a (radius 4.1-4.3 nm) was either absent or considerably diminished, and HDL2b (radius 5.3 nm) was also frequently absent. Very small particles comparable in size to normal HDL3c (radius 3.8 nm) were prominent. In patients with a bilirubin concentration greater than 250 mumol/l, normal HDL had totally disappeared and were replaced by large discoidal particles of radius 8.5 nm and small spherical particles of radius 3.6-3.7 nm. Both populations of particles were markedly depleted of cholesteryl ester and enriched in free cholesterol and phospholipid. The discoidal particles were rich in apolipoproteins E, A-I, A-II, and C, while the small spherical particles contained predominantly apolipoprotein A-I. LCAT activity was diminished in all subjects to 8-54% of normal, and was strongly positively correlated (r = 0.91 P less than 0.05) with plasma apolipoprotein A-I levels.  相似文献   

20.
The formation of hybrid association products between apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein A-II from human high-density lipoprotein was investigated in solutions of these apolipoprotein and in recombinant particles with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC). It was found that these two proteins interact in solution to form hybrid association products, but not to a marked degree. When these two proteins were incubated together with DMPC, it was likewise found that there was little tendency to reside on the same particle, as judged from the absence of hybrid oligomers by chemical cross-linking. By a modified immunoelectrophoretic method it was found that only about 15% of the A-II and 10% of the A-I were precipitated by the heterologous antiserum; from this it is concluded that 80–90% of these proteins do not form hybrid recombinants with the other protein. These results suggest that in the delipidated state, as well as in discoidal recombinants, there do not exist strong protein-protein interactions between A-I and A-II. This implies that even in the high-density lipoprotein, where both proteins coexist in the same particle, the A-II does not stabilize the molecular structure through interactions with A-I, and its role in this molecule remains obscure.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号