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1.
The major classes of lipoproteins were isolated from human plasma by ultracentrifugation in continuous density gradients using the Ti-14 and Ti-15 zonal rotors. Chylomicrons + VLDL, LDL, and HDL were separated from each other and from the more dense residual proteins (albumin fraction) of plasma by rate-zonal flotation in NaBr gradients in the density range 1.0-1.4. The chylomicron-VLDL fraction was subfractionated into constituent chylomicrons and VLDL by zonal ultracentrifugation in NaBr gradients in the density range 1.0-1.1. Plasma lipoproteins were analyzed for composition of lipids and content of protein, for electrophoretic mobility on paper, and for antigenic determinants by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion. Flotation constants (S(f)) of the LDL and HDL were calculated from measurements made in the analytical ultracentrifuge. Lipoproteins isolated from plasma by zonal ultracentrifugation were identical by these criteria to lipoproteins isolated by the usual procedure of sequential ultracentrifugation in solvents of increasing density. The procedure of zonal ultracentrifugation is rapid, quantitative, and less laborious than sequential techniques. Lipoproteins isolated by zonal ultracentrifugation are relatively uncontaminated by other proteins and extensive washing is therefore unnecessary. Zonal ultracentrifugation is more than a preparative method for the plasma lipoproteins; it is also an analytical procedure in that a record is obtained of the distribution and quantity of the lipoprotein within the continuous density gradient.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of repetitive ultracentrifugation on the physical and chemical properties of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) were investigated. VLDL recentrifuged one to seven times were characterized by chemical analyses, analytical ultracentrifugation and electron microscopy. The VLDL content of triglyceride was increased and the proportion of phospholipid decreased by ultracentrifugation. Recentrifugation of VLDL decreased the number of Sf o 20–100 particles and generated particles of Sf o > 400. The bulk of the material removed from VLDL by ultracentrifugation was lipoprotein having pre-g mobility on paper electrophoresis, flotation rates of Sf o 10–100 and a particle size of 300–400 Å. Two ultracentrifugations separated an average of 14% of the starting VLDL protein. Characterization of the apoproteins in this material by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, gel chromatography, immuno precipitation and amino acid analysis demonstrated a relatively high proportion of B-apoprotein and relatively little C-apoproteins.  相似文献   

3.
Procedures for the separation of plasma lipoprotein classes and subclasses by zonal ultracentrifugation are described. The main density classes, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), low density lipoproteins (LDL) and high density lipoproteins (HDL), in plasma can be separated in a single run for 20 hours. For the isolation of VLDL-LDL a centrifugation time of only 90 minutes is needed. Separations can be performed on plasma volumes varying from 10 to 400 ml in the Ti-14 rotor used; VLDL can in this way be isolated from 400 ml plasma in 30 minutes. The advantages and disadvantages of zonal ultracentrifugation in comparison with the commonly employed differential ultracentrifugation for separation of lipoproteins are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic lipase (HL) are enzymatic activities involved in lipoprotein metabolism. The purpose of this study was to analyze the physicochemical modifications of plasma lipoproteins produced by LPL activation in two patients with apoC-II deficiency syndrome and by HL activation in two patients with LPL deficiency. LPL activation was achieved by the infusion of normal plasma containing apoC-II and HL was released by the injection of heparin. Lipoproteins were analyzed by ultracentrifugation in a zonal rotor under rate flotation conditions before and after lipase activation. The LPL activation resulted in: a reduction of plasma triglycerides; a reduction of fast-floating very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) concentration; an increase of intermediate density lipoprotein (IDL), which maintained unaltered flotation properties; an increase of low density lipoproteins (LDL) accompanied by modifications of their flotation rates and composition; no significant variations of high density lipoprotein (HDL) levels; and an increase of the HDL flotation rate. The HL activation resulted in: a slight reduction of plasma triglycerides; a reduction of the relative triglyceride content of slow-floating VLDL, IDL, LDL2, and HDL3 accompanied by an increase of phospholipid in VLDL and by an increase of cholesteryl ester in IDL; and a reduction of the HDL flotation rate. These experiments in chylomicronemic patients provide in vivo evidence that LPL and HL are responsible for plasma triglyceride hydrolysis of different lipoproteins, and that LPL is particularly involved in determining the levels and physicochemical properties of LDL. Moreover, in these patients, the LPL activation does not directly change the HDL levels, and LPL or HL does not produce a step-wise conversion of HDL3 to HDL2 (or vice versa) but rather modifies the flotation rates of all the HDL molecules present in plasma.  相似文献   

6.
Lipoproteins were isolated from plasma of man, dog, rabbit, rat, and chicken by ultracentrifugation in continuous density gradients using the B14 titanium and B15 titanium zonal rotors. Both the VLDL and the LDL of human plasma were separated easily from the HDL and from the other more plentiful plasma proteins by centrifugation for only 1 or 2 hr in the B14 or B15 rotor, respectively. Satisfactory separation of the HDL from the more dense plasma proteins was not achieved with these rotors. The human LDL achieved isopycnic equilibrium (d 1.04) on prolonged periods (> 24 hr) of centrifugation in a sucrose-KBr density gradient. The pattern of distribution of cholesterol and phospholipid throughout the density gradient coincided with the pattern of distribution of the lipoprotein-protein measured spectrophotometrically or chemically. The concentration of cholesterol and phospholipid in the lipoproteins isolated by zonal ultracentrifugation agreed with analyses reported for lipoproteins isolated by sequential centrifugation in solutions of increasing density. The lipoproteins isolated by zonal ultracentrifugation were characterized further by their electrophoretic behavior. The fractions which were identified as the LDL (d 1.04-1.05) from all species migrated on paper as a beta-globulin; the LDL from plasma of dogs contained an additional component which has been designated as an alpha(2)-globulin. The fractions which were identified as the HDL from all species migrated as an alpha(1)-globulin. Reaction of human LDL with either rabbit antihuman beta-lipoprotein or rabbit antihuman serum resulted in a single immunodiffusion band. The S(f, 1.063) of the human LDL was calculated to be 6.0. When plasma from humans or rabbits was centrifuged in the B15 rotor, the HDL was not visible as a distinct peak and was not separable from the bulk of the more dense plasma proteins; when plasma from dogs or chickens was centrifuged under identical conditions, the HDL was clearly detectable. Even though the mean density of the HDL from dogs or chickens was not different from that of man or rabbits, the visibility of this lipoprotein in dogs and chickens was probably due to its high concentration in the plasma of these species. When plasma from the rat was centrifuged under similar conditions, the HDL was also clearly in evidence. Although rat plasma contained a relatively small concentration of HDL, the lipoprotein had a lower mean density than did the HDL of the other species and was therefore more easily separable from the dense plasma proteins. The procedure of zonal ultracentrifugation for the isolation of lipoproteins by flotation is simultaneously preparative and analytical and should find useful application in the investigation of the soluble lipoproteins from plasma and tissues.  相似文献   

7.
We have used an extraction procedure, which released membrane-bound apoB-100, to study the assembly of apoB-48 VLDL (very low density lipoproteins). This procedure released apoB-48, but not integral membrane proteins, from microsomes of McA-RH7777 cells. Upon gradient ultracentrifugation, the extracted apoB-48 migrated in the same position as the dense apoB-48-containing lipoprotein (apoB-48 HDL (high density lipoprotein)) secreted into the medium. Labeling studies with [(3)H]glycerol demonstrated that the HDL-like particle extracted from the microsomes contains both triglycerides and phosphatidylcholine. The estimated molar ratio between triglyceride and phosphatidylcholine was 0.70 +/- 0.09, supporting the possibility that the particle has a neutral lipid core. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that microsomal apoB-48 HDL can either be secreted as apoB-48 HDL or converted to apoB-48 VLDL. These results support the two-step model of VLDL assembly. To determine the size of apoB required to assemble HDL and VLDL, we produced apoB polypeptides of various lengths and followed their ability to assemble VLDL. Small amounts of apoB-40 were associated with VLDL, but most of the nascent chains associated with VLDL ranged from apoB-48 to apoB-100. Thus, efficient VLDL assembly requires apoB chains of at least apoB-48 size. Nascent polypeptides as small as apoB-20 were associated with particles in the HDL density range. Thus, the structural requirements of apoB to form HDL-like first-step particles differ from those to form second-step VLDL. Analysis of proteins in the d < 1.006 g/ml fraction after ultracentrifugation of the luminal content of the cells identified five chaperone proteins: binding protein, protein disulfide isomerase, calcium-binding protein 2, calreticulin, and glucose regulatory protein 94. Thus, intracellular VLDL is associated with a network of chaperones involved in protein folding. Pulse-chase and subcellular fractionation studies showed that apoB-48 VLDL did not accumulate in the rough endoplasmic reticulum. This finding indicates either that the two steps of apoB lipoprotein assembly occur in different compartment or that the assembled VLDL is transferred rapidly out of the rough endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

8.
The precursor-product relationship of very low density (VLDL) and low density lipoproteins (LDL) was studied. VLDL obtained from normal (NTG) and hypertriglyceridemic (HTG) subjects was fractionated by zonal ultracentrifugation and subjected to in vitro lipolysis. The individual subfractions and their isolated lipolysis products, as well as IDL and LDL, were rigorously characterized. A striking difference in the contribution of cholesteryl ester to VLDL is noted. In NTG subfractions, the cholesteryl ester to protein ratio increases with decreasing density (VLDL-I----VLDL-III). This is the expected result of triglyceride loss through lipolysis and cholesteryl ester gain through core-lipid transfer protein action. In HTG subfractions there is an abnormal enrichment of cholesteryl esters that is most marked in VLDL-I and nearly absent in VLDL-III. Thus, the trend of the cholesteryl ester to protein ratios is reversed, being highest in HTG-VLDL-I and lowest in VLDL-III. This is incompatible with the precursor-product relationship described by the VLDL----IDL----LDL cascade. In vitro lipolysis studies support the conclusion that not all HTG-VLDL can be metabolized to LDL. While all NTG subfractions yield products that are LDL-like in size, density, and composition, only HTG-VLDL-III, whose composition is most similar to normal, does so. HTG VLDL-I and VLDL-II products are large and light populations that are highly enriched in cholesteryl ester. We suggest that this abnormal enrichment of HTG-VLDL with cholesteryl ester results from the prolonged action of core-lipid transfer protein on the slowly metabolized VLDL mass. This excess cholesteryl ester load, unaffected by the process of VLDL catabolism, remains entrapped within the abnormal particle. Therefore, lipolysis yields an abnormal, cholesteryl ester-rich product that can never become LDL.  相似文献   

9.
The contribution of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL) to various low density lipoprotein (LDL) subfractions was examined in three normal subjects and two with familial combined hyperlipidemia. Autologous VLDL + IDL (d less than 1.019 g/ml) or VLDL only (d less than 1.006 g/ml; one subject only) were isolated by sequential ultracentrifugation, iodinated, and injected into each subject. The appearance, distribution, and subsequent disappearance of radioactivity into LDL density subpopulations was characterized using density gradient ultracentrifugation. These techniques help determine the contribution of precursors to various LDL subpopulations defined uniquely for each subject. The results from these studies have suggested: 1) it took up to several days of intravascular processing of precursor-derived LDL before it resembled the distribution of the 'steady-state' plasma LDL protein; 2) plasma VLDL and IDL precursors contributed rapidly to a broad density range of LDL; 3) the radiolabeled plasma precursors did not always contribute to all LDL density subfractions within an individual in proportion to their relative LDL protein mass as determined by density gradient ultracentrifugation; 4) with time, the distribution of the precursor-derived LDL became more buoyant or more dense than distribution of the LDL protein mass; and 5) the kinetic characteristics of precursor-derived particles within LDL changed within a relatively narrow density range and were not always related to the LDL density heterogeneity of each subject. These studies emphasize the complexities of apoB metabolism and the need to design studies to carefully examine the production of various LDL subpopulations, the kinetic fate and interconversions among the subpopulations, and ultimately, their relationship to the development of atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

10.
A comparison of nonhuman primate plasma lipoproteins isolated by swinging bucket rotor density gradient or fixed angle rotor differential ultracentrifugation is described. Whereas these two methods produced comparable results for the composition of low density (LDL) and high density (HDL) lipoproteins, the very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) fraction isolated with the swinging-bucket rotor contained relatively more cholesterol (free and esterified) and less phospholipid and protein than that fraction obtained with the fixed-angle rotor. Estimations of lipoprotein concentration by agarose gel electrophoresis and particle size by electron microscopy coupled with molar ratios of surface to core constituents indicate that the swinging bucket procedure resulted in a more complete harvest of VLDL particles, especially those in the larger size range.  相似文献   

11.
Isolated livers from rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) were perfused in order to asses the nature of newly synthesized hepatic lipoprotein. Perfusate containing [3H]leucine was recirculated for 1.5 hr, followed by an additional 2.5-hr perfusion with fresh perfusate. Equilibrium density gradient ultracentrifugation clearly separated VLDL from LDL. The apoprotein composition of VLDL secreted by the liver was similar to that of serum VLDL. The perfusate LDL contained some poorly radiolabeled, apoB-rich material, which appeared to be contaminating serum LDL. There was also some material of an LDL-like density, which was rich in radiolabeled apoE. Rate zonal density gradient ultracentrifugation fractionated HDL. All perfusate HDL fractions had a decreased cholesteryl ester/unesterified cholesterol ratio, compared to serum HDL. Serum HDL distributed in one symmetric peak near the middle of the gradient, with coincident peaks of apoA-I and apoA-II. The least dense fractions of the perfusate gradient were rich in radiolabeled apoE. The middle of the perfusate gradient contained particles rich in radiolabeled apoA-I and apoA-II. The peak of apoA-I was offset from the apoA-II peak towards the denser end of the gradient. The dense end of the HDL gradient contained lipoprotein-free apoA-I, apoE, and small amounts of apoA-II, probably resulting from the relative instability of nascent lipoprotein compared to serum lipoprotein. Perfusate HDL apoA-I isoforms were more basic than serum apoA-I isoforms. Preliminary experiments, using noncentrifugal methods, suggest that some hepatic apoA-I is secreted in a lipoprotein-free form. In conclusion, the isolated rhesus monkey liver produces VLDL similar to serum VLDL, but produces LDL and HDL which differ in several important aspects from serum LDL and HDL.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies with fasting rats showed that the intestine produces endogenous very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) which resemble those in the plasma. Intestinal VLDL also were found to be important in lipid transport during absorption of saturated but not of unsaturated fat. These findings depended upon separations of a chylomicron-rich fraction (S(f) > 400) from VLDL (S(f) 20-400) by preparative ultracentrifugation methods based on particle flotation rates. The present studies correlate this method with electron microscopic measurement of lipoprotein particle size. Almost all intestinal lymph lipoprotein particles from fasting rats were less than 750 A in diameter, and could not be distinguished morphologically from plasma VLDL. Cholestyramine administration or bile diversion led to decreased lymph lipid output, correlating with marked reduction in VLDL. This supports the concept that lymph VLDL contain endogenous lipid which is reabsorbed from the intestinal lumen. During exogenous fatty acid absorption, lymph lipoprotein particle sizes were significantly smaller after administration of palmitate than after administration of linoleate, a finding consistent with ultracentrifugal evidence of the importance of VLDL in lipid transport during palmitate absorption. These studies fully confirm and extend earlier observations. Together, they show that the intestine is a source of endogenous VLDL in the fasting animal. In addition, significant quantities of exogenous lipid are transported in VLDL during palmitate absorption, whereas with linoleate absorption nearly all lipid is in chylomicrons. These findings indicate that the small intestine plays a role in lipoprotein metabolism which extends beyond the absorption of dietary fat.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied apolipoprotein synthesis, intracellular modification and secretion by primary adult rat hepatocyte cultures using continuous pulse or pulse chase labeling with [35S]methionine, immunoprecipitation and two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The flotation properties of the newly secreted apolipoproteins were studied by discontinuous density gradient ultracentrifugation and one- and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These studies showed that rat hepatocyte apoE is modified intracellularly to produce minor isoproteins that differ in size and charge. One of these minor isoproteins represents a monosialated apoE form (apoE3s1). Similarly, apoCIII is modified intracellularly to produce a disialated apoCIII form (apoCIIIs2), whereas newly synthesized apoA-I and apoA-IV are not glycosylated and overlap on two-dimensional gels with the proapoA-I and the plasma apoA-IV form, respectively. Both unmodified and modified apolipoproteins are secreted into the medium. Separation of secreted apolipoproteins by density gradient ultracentrifugation has shown that 50% of apoE, 80% of apoA-I, and more than 90% of apoA-IV and apoCIII are secreted in a lipid-poor form, whereas apoB-100 and apoB-48 are 100% associated with lipids. ApoB-100 floats in the VLDL and IDL regions, whereas apoB-48 is found in all lipoprotein fractions. ApoE and small amounts of apoA-I, apoA-IV and apoCIII float in the HDL region. Small amounts of apoE and apoCIII are also found in the VLDL and IDL regions, and apoE in the LDL region. Ultracentrifugation of nascent lipoproteins in the presence of rat serum promoted flotation of apoA-I and apoA-IV in the HDL fraction and resulted in increased flotation and distribution of apoE and apoCs in VLDL, IDL and LDL regions. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that intracellular assembly of lipoproteins involves apoB-48 and apoB-100 forms, whereas a large portion of apoA-I, apoCIII and apoA-IV can be secreted in a lipid-poor form, which associates extracellularly with preexisting lipoproteins.  相似文献   

14.
1. The serum lipoprotein pattern of water buffalo was studied by means of electrophoresis and the lipoproteins were isolated by ultracentrifugation on the basis of their hydrated density. 2. High density lipoproteins (HDL) showed a higher level of cholesterol than did the other lipoproteins. Moreover, the level of phospholipids was higher in HDL than in very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). 3. The buffalo B100 apoprotein was similar to that of man and rat. Three apoproteins similar to human apo E, apo AI and AII were found in buffalo HDL, buffalo VLDL contained essentially apo B protein.  相似文献   

15.
1. Concentration and composition of the "very low density lipoproteins" (VLDL), "low density lipoproteins" (LDL) and "high density lipoproteins" (HDL) and of non-floatable lipids of fetal rat serum (day 22 of pregnancy) were determined by ultracentrifugation, thin-layer chromatographic separation of the floated lipids and quantitation of the lipid and protein moiety. 2. The concentration of VLDL is in the fetal rat by one order of magnitude lower, and that of LDL, 5fold higher than in the adult animal; the concentration of HDL in fetal serum amounts to 60% of the value of adult animals. 3. The composition of LDL and HDL of fetal serum does not differ from that in the serum of adult animals; in contrast, the fetal VLDL have a higher proportion of protein and cholesterol and a lower proportion of triglycerides than the VLDL of adult serum. The electrophoretic mobility of the fetal VLDL is lower than that of adult VLDL.  相似文献   

16.
Animals of various species are widely used as models with which to study atherosclerosis and the lipoprotein metabolism. The objective of this study was to investigate the lipoprotein profiles in Wistar rats and New Zealand white rabbits with experimentally induced hyperlipidemia by means of ultracentrifugation. The Schlieren curves were utilized to compare suckling and adult rat sera to determine whether aging causes alterations in lipoprotein profiles. A striking feature of the data is the high concentration of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), (>5.2 mmol/l cholesterol) in the 2-week old rat serum pool which was greatly decreased in the 3-weeks rat serum pool (<1.3 mmol/l cholesterol). Additional experiments were performed to permit a direct comparison of the amounts of lipoprotein present in rat sera in experimental hyperlipidemia post-Triton WR 1339 administration. Rapid changes in concentrations in very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL), LDL and high-density lipoproteins (HDL) were observed after Triton injection. The administration of Triton WR 1339 to fasted rats resulted in an elevation of serum cholesterol levels. Triton physically alters VLDL, rendering them refractive to the action of lipolytic enzymes in the blood and tissues, preventing or delaying their removal from the blood. Whereas the VLDL concentration was increased markedly, those of LDL and HDL were decreased at 20 h after Triton treatment. Rabbits were fed a diet containing 2% cholesterol for 60 days to develop hyperlipidemia and atheromatous aortic plaques. A combination of preparative and analytical ultracentrifugation was used to investigate of LDL aliquots, to prepare radioactive-labeled lipoproteins and to study induced hyperlipidemia in rabbits. Analytical ultracentrifugation was applied to investigate the LDL flotation peaks before and after cholesterol feeding of rabbits. Modified forms of LDL were detected in the plasma of rabbits with experimentally induced atherosclerosis. ApoB-containing particles, migrating as LDL, intermediate density lipoproteins and VLDL were the most abundant lipoproteins. Gamma camera in vivo scintigraphy on rabbits with radiolabeled lipoproteins revealed visible signals corresponding to atherosclerotic plaques of the aorta and carotid arteries.  相似文献   

17.
We have examined the capability of a previously developed compartmental model to explain the kinetics of radioiodinated apolipoprotein (apo) B-100 in very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL), and low density lipoproteins (LDL) separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation after intravenous injection of radioiodinated VLDL into New Zealand white (NZW) and Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic (WHHL) rabbits. Our model was developed primarily from kinetics in whole blood plasma of apoB-100 in particles with and without apoE after intravenous injection of large VLDL, total VLDL, IDL, and LDL. When the initial conditions for this model were assumed to be an intravenous injection of radiolabeled VLDL, the plasma VLDL and LDL simulations for NZW rabbits and the VLDL, IDL, and LDL simulations for WHHL rabbits were found to be inconsistent with the observed density gradient data. By adding a new pathway in the VLDL portion of the model for NZW rabbits and a new compartment in VLDL for WHHL rabbits, and by assuming some cross-contamination in the density gradient ultracentrifugal separations, it was possible to bring our model, which was based upon measurements of 125I-labeled apoB-100 in whole plasma, into conformity with the data obtained by density gradient ultracentrifugation. The relatively modest changes required in the model to fit the gradient ultracentrifugation data support the suitability of our approach to the kinetic analysis of the metabolism of apoB-100 in VLDL and its conversion to IDL and LDL based upon measurements of 125I-labeled apoB-100 in whole plasma after injection of radiolabeled VLDL, IDL, and LDL. Furthermore, the differences in kinetics observed by us between data from whole plasma and data from plasma submitted to ultracentrifugal separation from the same or similar animals highlight the fact that small variations that can occur in the separation of lipoprotein classes by buoyant density can lead to confusing results.  相似文献   

18.
In cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) fed an atherogenic diet, large, cholesterol ester-rich LDL (Mr greater than 3.5.10(6] are found at the same time that the plasma triacylglycerol levels are low. We studied whether the presence of higher concentrations of triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins (VLDL) during in vitro incubations would allows depletion from LDL of cholesterol ester and a decreased LDL molecular weight. Three high Mr LDL (Mr = (3.7-4.8).10(6)), rich in cholesterol ester (50 +/- 1.4% by weight), were isolated from three animals by zonal ultracentrifugation, and were then incubated with human VLDL at 37 degrees C for 18 h in lipoprotein-deficient human plasma containing neutral lipid transfer activity. After incubation, modified LDL (M-LDL) was isolated by zonal ultracentrifugation. M-LDL was triacylglycerol-rich (36 +/- 5% by weight) and cholesterol ester-poor (20 +/- 3%), and cholesterol ester had transferred into VLDL. Purified lipoprotein lipase was added to the M-LDL, and triacylglycerol was hydrolyzed. The size of the post-lipolysis M-LDL (Mp-LDL) particles became smaller (mean diameters of 253 A and 228 A for two native LDLs and 215 A and 193 A for Mp-LDL, respectively). Both analytical and zonal ultracentrifugation showed Mp-LDL to be more dense than native LDL. Estimated molecular weights for Mp-LDL were 40%-50% less than that of the original LDL, and fell within the molecular weight range for normal human and monkey LDL. Lipid exchanges, but not apoprotein transfers, were responsible for LDL remodelling, as supported by three separate methods of analysis. Cholesterol ester losses accounted for about two-thirds of the molecular weight decrease. These in vitro results suggest that cholesterol ester enrichment of apoprotein B lipoprotein particles can be reversed by providing adequate levels of VLDL in the presence of neutral lipid transfer processes and lipolytic activity.  相似文献   

19.
Three different but related abnormal lipoprotein species, LP-X1, LP-X2, and LP-X3, have been isolated from cholestatic plasma by ethanol precipitation and zonal ultracentrifugation. All three populations are rich in phospholipids (64.9 to 67.5%) and cholesterol (23.0 to 26.8%) but poor in cholesteryl esters (0.4 to 1.9%), triglycerides (1.8 to 3.2%), and protein (3.2 to 6.7%) with differences in chemical composition which result in buoyant densities (1.038, 1.049, and 1.058, respectively) to allow their separation. LP-X1, LP-X2, and LP-X3 exhibited apparent flotation rates of 17.3, 9.7, and 3.2 Svedbergs and Stokes radii of 339, 343, and 294 A, respectively. As determined from circular dichroic measurements, the protein constituents of all three particles possessed a high degree of alpha helical structure (41 to 65%). Each LP-X particle exhibited abnormally low fluidity as evaluated by electron paramagnetic resonance. All of the particles contained human serum albumin and the C-proteins as major protein constituents, but only LP-X2 and LP-X3 contained apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein E.  相似文献   

20.
In contrast to plasma from most other animals, guinea pig plasma causes little or no stimulation of lipoprotein lipase activity. Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) isolated by ultracentrifugation of guinea pig serum caused a definite stimulation of lipase activity, whereas the infranatant inhibited the activity. Gel filtration in 5 M guanidinium hydrochloride of delipidated VLDL demonstrated that the activation was caused by a low molecular weight protein. The VLDL themselves were hydrolized at similar rates as human VLDL both by guinea pig and by bovine lipoprotein lipases. Thus, guinea pig VLDL contain an activator for lipoprotein lipase analogous to that in other animals and there is enough of the activator to support rapid hydrolysis of the VLDL lipids by the lipase.  相似文献   

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