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1.
Biliary micellar cholesterol nucleates via the vesicular pathway   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Biliary cholesterol nucleates primarily from phospholipid vesicles. In this study, we investigated the mode of nucleation of micellar cholesterol. Ten biles (four human and six model) were examined. The vesicular and micellar fractions of each bile were separated by gel chromatography. The whole biles and their isolated carriers were incubated at 37 degrees C until nucleation time. In whole human biles, the proportion of total cholesterol in vesicles rose throughout the incubation (from zero time to nucleation time) from 15.5 +/- 8.6% to 28.0 +/- 12.5%, and in model biles from 46.8 +/- 22.4% to 75.5 +/- 8.2%. The vesicular isolated fraction remained unchanged throughout incubation. In isolated micelles devoid of vesicles at zero time, new vesicles formed during incubation, carrying increasing proportions of cholesterol. At nucleation time, these vesicles contained 11.0% of originally micellar cholesterol in human biles, and 41.2% in model biles. The new vesicles formed in whole bile and in the micellar fraction were chromatographically and chemically similar to the vesicles originally present in bile. These data suggest that micellar cholesterol nucleates via the neoformation of phospholipid vesicles, which seem to be the final common pathway for cholesterol nucleation in bile.  相似文献   

2.
We determined the distribution of lecithin molecular species between vesicles and mixed micelles in cholesterol super-saturated model biles (molar taurocholate-lecithin-cholesterol ratio 67:23:10, 3 g/dl, 0.15 M NaCl, pH approximately 6-7) that contained equimolar synthetic lecithin mixtures or egg yolk or soybean lecithins. After apparent equilibration (48 h), biles were fractionated by Superose 6 gel filtration chromatography at 20 degrees C, and lecithin molecular species in the vesicle and mixed micellar fractions were quantified as benzoyl diacylglycerides by high performance liquid chromatography. With binary lecithin mixtures, vesicles were enriched with lecithins containing the most saturated sn-1 or sn-2 chains by as much as 2.4-fold whereas mixed micelles were enriched in the more unsaturated lecithins. Vesicles isolated from model biles composed of egg yolk (primarily sn-1 16:0 and 18:0 acyl chains) or soy bean (mixed saturated and unsaturated sn-1 acyl chains) lecithins were selectively enriched (6.5-76%) in lecithins with saturated sn-1 acyl chains whereas mixed micelles were enriched with lecithins composed of either sn-1 18:1, 18:2, and 18:3 unsaturated or sn-2 20:4, 22:4, and 22:6 polyunsaturated chains. Gel filtration, lipid analysis, and quasielastic light scattering revealed that apparent micellar cholesterol solubilities and metastable vesicle cholesterol/lecithin molar ratios were as much as 60% and 100% higher, respectively, in biles composed of unsaturated lecithins. Acyl chain packing constraints imposed by distinctly different particle geometries most likely explain the asymmetric distribution of lecithin molecular species between vesicles and mixed micelles in model bile as well as the variations in apparent micellar cholesterol solubilities and vesicle cholesterol/lecithin molar ratios.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
We modified classic equilibrium dialysis methodology to correct for dialysant dilution and Donnan effects, and have systematically studied how variations in total lipid concentration, bile salt (taurocholate):lecithin (egg yolk) ratio, and cholesterol content influence inter-mixed micellar/vesicular (non-lecithin-associated) concentrations (IMC) of bile salts (BS) in model bile. To simulate large volumes of dialysant, the total volume (1 ml) of model bile was exchanged nine times during dialysis. When equilibrium was reached, dialysate BS concentrations plateaued, and initial and final BS concentrations in the dialysant were identical. After corrections for Donnan effects, IMC values were appreciably lower than final dialysate BS concentrations. Quasielastic light scattering was used to validate these IMC values by demonstrating that lipid particle sizes and mean scattered light intensities did not vary when model biles were diluted with aqueous BS solutions of the appropriate IMC. Micelles and vesicles were separated from cholesterol-supersaturated model bile, utilizing high performance gel chromatography with an eluant containing the IMC. Upon rechromatography of micelles and vesicles using an identical IMC, there was no net transfer of lipid between micelles and vesicles. To simulate dilution during gel filtration, model biles were diluted with 10 mM Na cholate, the prevailing literature eluant, resulting in net transfer of lipid between micelles and vesicles, the direction of which depended upon total lipid concentration and BS/lecithin ratio. Using the present methodology, we demonstrated that inter-mixed micellar/vesicular concentrations (IMC) values increased strongly (5 to 40 mM) with increases in both bile salt (BS):lecithin ratio and total lipid concentration, whereas variations in cholesterol content had no appreciable effects. For model biles with typical physiological biliary lipid compositions, IMC values exceeded the critical micellar concentration of the pure BS, implying that in cholesterol-supersaturated biles, simple BS micelles coexist with mixed BS/lecithin/cholesterol micelles and cholesterol/lecithin vesicles. We believe that this methodology allows the systematic evaluation of IMC values, with the ultimate aim of accurately separating micellar, vesicular, and potential other cholesterol-carrying particles from native bile.  相似文献   

4.
A nonmicellar, bile salt-independent mode of cholesterol transport in human bile involving phospholipid vesicles was recently reported by our group. In the present study, we have investigated the relative contribution of the phospholipid vesicles and mixed bile salt-phospholipid micelles to cholesterol transport in human hepatic and gallbladder biles. The vesicles (ca 800 A diameter) were demonstrated by quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS) in fresh bile and after chromatography. Gel filtration under conditions that preserved micellar integrity demonstrated that biliary cholesterol was associated with both vesicles and micelles. At low bile salt concentration, the vesicular phase was predominant and most of the cholesterol was transported by it. With increasing bile salt concentrations, a progressive solubilization of the vesicles occurred with a concomitant increase in the amount of cholesterol transported by micelles. The vesicular carrier may be of particular biological significance for cholesterol solubilization in supersaturated biles.  相似文献   

5.
Using complementary physical-chemical methods including turbidimetry, quasielastic light scattering, gel filtration, and phase analysis, we examined the interactions between dilute concentrations of the common bile salt, taurochenodeoxycholate (TCDC), and uni- and multilamellar vesicles (MLVs) composed of defined molecular species of lecithin (L) and varying contents of cholesterol (Ch). Dissolution rates of MLVs with micellar TCDC, as assessed by turbidimetry, were more rapid with vesicles composed of sn-1 palmitoyl species, typical of biliary L, compared with those composed of the more hydrophobic sn-1 stearoyl species. Incorporation of Ch retarded MLV dissolution rates in proportion to the Ch content, and only at high Ch contents were dissolution rates appreciably influenced by the sn-2 fatty acid composition of L. When MLVs contained Ch in amounts characteristic of intracellular membranes (Ch/L approximately 0.1), the dissolution rates of the individual L species by TCDC accurately predicted the steady state L composition of human bile. TCDC interacted with small unilamellar L/Ch vesicles (SUVs) at concentrations well below, as well as appreciably above, its critical micellar concentration. In accordance with the TCDC-egg yolk L-H2O phase diagram, perimicellar concentrations of TCDC interacted with SUVs to form aggregates that were approximately twice the size of the SUVs. These were consistent with the formation of a dispersed hexagonal (rod-like) phase, which co-existed with aqueous bile salt (BS) monomers and either micellar or unilamellar SUV phases. Micellar TCDC completely solubilized SUVs as mixed micelles, putatively via this transient hexagonal phase. With modest Ch-supersaturation, dissolution was followed by the reemergence of a new vesicle population that coexisted metastably with mixed micelles. With high Ch supersaturation, TCDC extracted L and Ch molecules from SUVs in different proportions to form Ch-supersaturated mixed micelles and Ch-enriched SUVs, in accordance with the metastable phase diagram. These experiments are consistent with the hypothesis that sn-1 palmitoyl L species are subselected for bile, in part, by physical-chemical interactions of intracellular BS concentrations with Ch-poor membranes and that the subsequent evolution of Ch-rich vesicles and Ch-saturated mixed micelles occurs via a transitional hexagonal (rod) phase. These liquid-crystalline states are likely to be transient in Ch-unsaturated biles, but may persist in Ch-supersaturated human biles because of their high Ch contents which retard or inhibit these phase transitions.  相似文献   

6.
We explored the influence of several compositional factors considered capable of influencing the nucleation time of model biles supersaturated in cholesterol. In addition to the classical techniques, e.g., electron microscopy and quasielastic light scattering, employed for size measurement and structural assessment, we employed a novel technique, i.e., video-enhanced microscopy, for particle evaluation in these polydisperse systems which often may simultaneously contain isolated small vesicles, their complex aggregates, and small cholesterol monohydrate crystals. The factors we studied included dilution, degree of cholesterol supersaturation, bile salt/lecithin molar ratio, and Ca2+ concentration. Dilution markedly raised the degree of cholesterol saturation, prolonged nucleation time for cholesterol monohydrate crystals, and favored formation of metastable small unilamellar vesicles. Increasing the degree of cholesterol supersaturation as an independent variable in more concentrated systems both shortened the nucleation time and favored spontaneous formation of a relatively small number of isolated vesicles. A decrease in bile salt/lecithin molar ratio within the physiologically relevant range was accompanied by a prolonged nucleation time and favored spontaneous vesicle formation. Large numbers of small unilamellar vesicles were observed even in concentrated model bile solutions (total lipids: 20 g/dl) when the bile salt/lecithin molar ratio was 1.9 or less. At physiological concentrations, Ca2+ promoted nucleation of cholesterol monohydrate crystals only in vesicle-containing solutions. Taken together, the following conclusions can be drawn. First, spontaneous vesicle formation in dilute systems prolongs solid cholesterol crystal nucleation. It can thus provide a supplementary non-micellar mode of cholesterol transport in micellar systems of supersaturated human bile. Second, dilution, degree of cholesterol supersaturation, and a decrease in bile salt/lecithin ratio prolong cholesterol crystal nucleation time and favor spontaneous vesicle formation. With increasing calcium concentrations, opposite effects are observed. Third, the presence of vesicles may help to account for the frequently observed and otherwise unexplained remarkable degree of metastable supersaturation and prolonged metastability (delayed nucleation time) for cholesterol in human bile.  相似文献   

7.
We describe the use and validation of Superose 6, a high performance gel filtration medium for rapid, high resolution separation and sizing of coexisting simple micelles, mixed micelles, and vesicles in bile. We fractionated model biles (1.7-4.2 g/dl total lipid concentration, 0.15 M NaCl) composed of lecithin (L), cholesterol (Ch), and the common bile salt taurocholate (TC) using Superose 6 gel filtration columns (1.0 cm diameter, 30 cm length, 0.5 ml model bile application, 1.0 ml fractions) pre-equilibrated and eluted with 2.5-10.0 mM TC. Lipid particle sizes were determined by quasielastic light scattering and lipid compositions by conventional analyses. In the absence of L and Ch, pure TC "biles" (32.2 mM), when eluted in the presence of 7.5 mM TC, yielded a single peak of particles (mean hydrodynamic radii, Rh values of 11-15 A), consistent with simple TC micelles. Model biles containing L and TC ([L] = 13.8 mM, [TC] = 32.2 mM) were fractionated with baseline resolution into TC-L mixed micelles, (Rh values of 30-40 A) and simple TC micelles. In agreement with the ternary TC-L-H2O phase diagram (Mazer, N. A., et al. 1980. Biochemistry. 19: 601-615), the proportions of simple and mixed micelles were inversely related to L concentrations ([L] = 0-32.2 mM) and correlated positively with eluant TC concentration. Superose 6 gel fractionation of model biles "super-saturated" with Ch (TC:L:Ch molar ratio 27:63:10, total lipid concentration 3 g/dl) yielded high resolution separation of vesicles (Rh value of 320 A) from mixed micelles of TC-L-Ch (Rh values of 40-50 A) and simple TC micelles (Rh values of 11-15 A). At an eluant TC concentration of 7.5 mM, Ch-rich vesicles (Ch/L molar ratio = 1.6) separated that contained 40% of total Ch, 9% of total L, and no TC, accurately reflecting predictions of the quaternary L-Ch-TC-H2O metastable phase diagram (Mazer, N. A., and M. C. Carey. 1983 Biochemistry. 22: 426-442). This suggested that a 7.5 mM TC concentration approximated the intermicellar concentration under the experimental conditions. We also fractionated an identical model bile using conventional Sephacryl S-300, a medium generally used to study model and native biles. Compared with Superose 6, the Sephacryl S-300 column of equivalent size yielded particle separations with lower resolution and speed (30 h v l h).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Biliary lipids, water and cholesterol gallstones   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Cholesterol supersaturation, hydrophobic bile salts, pronucleating proteins and impaired gall-bladder motility may contribute to gallstone pathogenesis. We here show that both gallstone-susceptible C57L and gallstone-resistant AKR male inbred mice exhibit supersaturated gall-bladder biles during early lithogenesis, whereas bile-salt composition becomes hydrophobic only in susceptible C57L mice. In vitro, cholesterol crystallization occurs depending on relative amounts of lipids; excess cholesterol may exceed solubilizing capacity of mixed bile salt-phospholipid micelles, whereas excess bile salts compared with phospholipids leads to deficient cholesterol-storage capacity in vesicles. In vivo, bile lipid contents are mainly determined at the level of the hepatocyte canalicular membrane, where specific transport proteins enable lipid secretion [ABCG5/G8 (ATP-binding cassette transporter G5/G8) for cholesterol, MDR3 (multi-drug resistant 3) for phospholipid, BSEP (bile salt export pump)]. These transport proteins are regulated by farnesoid X and liver X nuclear receptors. After nascent bile formation, modulation of bile water contents in biliary tract and gall-bladder exerts critical effects on cholesterol crystallization. During progressive bile concentration (particularly in the fasting gall-bladder), cholesterol and, preferentially, phospholipid transfer occurs from cholesterol-unsaturated vesicles to emerging mixed micelles. The remaining unstable cholesterol-enriched vesicles may nucleate crystals. Various aquaporins have recently been discovered throughout the biliary tract, with potential relevance for gallstone formation.  相似文献   

9.
Gel filtration with bile salts at intermixed micellar/vesicular concentrations (IMC) in the eluant has been proposed to isolate vesicles and micelles from supersaturated model biles, but the presence of vesicular aggregates makes this method unreliable. We have now validated a new method for isolation of various phases. First, aggregated vesicles and - if present - cholesterol crystals are pelleted by short ultracentrifugation. Cholesterol contained in crystals and vesicular aggregates can be quantitated from the difference of cholesterol contents in the pellets before and after bile salt-induced solubilization of the vesicular aggregates. Micelles are then isolated by ultrafiltration of the supernatant through a highly selective 300 kDa filter and unilamellar vesicles by dialysis against buffer containing bile salts at IMC values. Lipids contained in unilamellar vesicles are also estimated by subtraction of lipid contents in filtered micelles from lipid contents in (unilamellar vesicle+micelle containing) supernatant ('subtraction method'). 'Ultrafiltration-dialysis' and 'subtraction' methods yielded identical lipid solubilization in unilamellar vesicles and identical vesicular cholesterol/phospholipid ratios. In contrast, gel filtration yielded much more lipids in micelles and less in unilamellar vesicles, with much higher vesicular cholesterol/phospholipid ratios. When vesicles obtained by dialysis were analyzed by gel filtration, vesicular cholesterol/phospholipid ratios increased strongly, despite correct IMC values for bile salts in the eluant. Subsequent extraction of column material showed significant amounts of lipids. In conclusion, gel filtration may underestimate vesicular lipids and overestimate vesicular cholesterol/phospholipid ratios, supposedly because of lipids remaining attached to the column. Combined ultracentrifugation-ultrafiltration-dialysis should be considered state-of-the-art methodology for quantification of cholesterol carriers in model biles.  相似文献   

10.
A rapid, silicone polymer film uptake method was used to determine the cholesterol (Ch) thermodynamic activity (A(T)) in taurocholate (TC)-lecithin (L) and taurochenodeoxycholate (TCDC)-L model biles supersaturated with Ch. Also, time-dependent quasielastic light scattering (QLS) measurements and microscopic observations were made to determine the nature of particle species and the Ch nucleation times. In all cases in which Ch-L vesicles were present, a linear relationship between the logarithm of Ch nucleation times and Ch A(T) was found. These findings support that Ch A(T) is the appropriate parameter that represents the Ch nucleation tendency and that vesicles are catalytic sites in the Ch nucleation process. When Ca2+, a nucleation promoter ion, was present in the supersaturated model biles, the increased values of Ch A(T) quantitatively correlated with shorter Ch nucleation times. These latter findings further demonstrate that Ch A(T) is the dominant factor in explaining the Ch nucleation tendencies in supersaturated model biles.  相似文献   

11.
The partitioning of phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecular species between mixed micelles and vesicles was studied in each of seven human gallbladder biles. Biles were fractionated by Sephacryl S-300 SF gel filtration chromatography, and PC species in the micellar and vesicular fractions were quantitated by high performance liquid chromatography. Micelles were enriched in species containing unsaturated acyl groups (e.g., 16:1-18:2, 18:1-18:2, and 18:1-18:3); vesicles were enriched in more highly saturated species (e.g., 16:0-16:1, 16:0-18:1, and 18:0-18:1). Separate multivariate analyses for each bile demonstrated that the distribution of PC species between vesicles and micelles was related to the degree of sn-1 and sn-2 unsaturation, and sn-1, but not sn-2, chain length. In addition, the tendency to partition into the micellar phase was particularly marked when unsaturation was present at both the sn-1 and sn-2 positions. When this interaction was included in the multivariate analyses, the regression models accounted for virtually all of the variation in PC partitioning (for each of the seven patients r2 = 0.92-0.98, P less than 0.03). These results suggest that the partitioning of PC species between micelles and vesicles is strictly determined by sn-1 chain length and the degree of unsaturation at both the sn-1 and sn-2 positions. In light of recent reports that fatty acyl composition influences the cholesterol content of vesicles and micelles in model biles, these results raise the possibility that diet-induced alterations in the phospholipid species and the relative proportions of biliary lipid particles may influence the cholesterol-carrying capacity of bile.  相似文献   

12.
Aggregation of cholesterol-phospholipid vesicles in supersaturated biles precedes cholesterol crystal formation. In this study we examined the relationship between the percentage of cholesterol carried by vesicles and/or their composition and the propensity to form cholesterol crystals (nucleation time). Bile (common bile duct, gallbladder and T-tube) was obtained from patients with and without gallstones. Gel filtration chromatography resolved three peaks, a void volume vesicle, a smaller vesicle (identified by electron microscopy and of distinct composition compared to the larger void volume vesicle), and the mixed micelle. The void volume vesicle was present in 11 of 28 abnormal gallbladder biles, but in none of the 10 normal gallbladder biles. Despite this difference, no correlation between the nucleation time of whole bile with either the percentage of cholesterol carried by or cholesterol/phospholipid ratio of the void volume vesicle was found. Nucleation time was, however, found to correlate with the composition of the small-vesicular transport form. No significant difference in the composition or percentage of the small-vesicular form or the combined vesicular forms was found between normal and abnormal gallbladder biles, although the latter nucleated significantly more rapidly. Our results confirm the importance of vesicles in the nucleation process but suggest that other factors, not yet identified, appear to be responsible for the more rapid nucleation seen in abnormal gallbladder biles.  相似文献   

13.
The proportion of biliary cholesterol carried by phospholipid vesicles may be an important determinant of the lithogenicity of bile. The distribution of biliary cholesterol between vesicles and other aggregational forms is often determined by gel filtration under standard conditions. The aim of this study was to measure the proportion of biliary cholesterol in vesicles in native unprocessed bile and to compare it with values obtained by chromatography. A modified quasi-elastic light-scattering method was used to measure vesicular cholesterol in whole bile. It was suitable only for lightly pigmented biles with a relatively monodisperse population of vesicles. In ten human biles examined, the proportion of cholesterol in vesicles by gel filtration was 40 +/- 8.1% (mean +/- S.D.) by chemical measurement, and 38 +/- 7.2% by [3H]cholesterol estimation. Quasi-elastic light-scattering measurements of these biles produced vesicular cholesterol values of 36 +/- 9.4%. Chromatography may affect lipid particles in bile. Nevertheless, it provides a relatively accurate measurement of biliary cholesterol in vesicles.  相似文献   

14.
We developed equilibrium phase diagrams corresponding to aqueous lipid compositions of upper small intestinal contents during lipid digestion and absorption in adult human beings. Ternary lipid systems were composed of a physiological mixture of bile salts (BS), mixed intestinal lipids (MIL), principally partially ionized fatty (oleic) acid (FA) plus racemic monooleylglycerol (MG), and cholesterol (Ch), all at fixed aqueous-electrolyte concentrations, pH, temperature, and pressure. The condensed phase diagram for typical physiological conditions (1 g/dL total lipids, FA:MG molar ratio of 5:1, pH 6.5, 0.15 M Na+ at 37 degrees C) was similar to that of a dilute model bile [BS/lecithin (PL)/Ch] system [Carey, M. C., & Small, D. M. (1978) J. Clin. Invest. 61, 998-1026]. We identified two one-phase zones composed of mixed micelles and lamellar liquid crystals, respectively, and two two-phase zones, one composed of Ch monohydrate crystals and Ch-saturated micelles and the other of physiologic relevance composed of Ch- and MIL-saturated mixed micelles and unilamellar vesicles. A single large three-phase zone in the system was composed of Ch-saturated micelles, Ch monohydrate crystals, and liquid crystals. Micellar phase boundaries for otherwise typical physiological conditions were expanded by increases in total lipid concentration (0.25-5 g/dL), pH (5.5-7.5), and FA:MG molar ratio (5-20:1), resulting in a reduction of the size of the physiological two-phase zone. Mean particle hydrodynamic radii (Rh), measured by quasielastic light scattering (QLS), demonstrated an abrupt increase from micellar (less than 40 A) to micelle plus vesicle sizes (400-700 A) as this two-phase zone was entered. With relative lipid compositions within this zone, unilamellar vesicles formed spontaneously following coprecipitation, and their sizes changed markedly as functions of time, reaching equilibrium values only after 4 days. Further, vesicle Rh values were influenced appreciably by MIL:mixed bile salt (MBS) ratio, pH, total lipid concentration, and FA:MG ratio, but not by Ch content. In comparison, micellar systems equilibrated rapidly, and their Rh values only slightly influenced by physical-chemical variables of physiological importance. In contrast to the BS-PL-Ch system [Mazer, N. A., & Carey, M. C. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 426-442], no divergence in micellar sizes occurred as the micellar phase boundary was approached. The ionization state of FA at simulated "intestinal" pH values (5.5-7.5) in the micellar and physiologic two-phase zones was principally that of 1:1 sodium hydrogen dioleate, an insoluble swelling "acid soap" compound. By phase separation and analysis, tie-lines for the constituent phase in the two-phase zone demonstrated that the mixed micelles were saturated with MIL and Ch and the coexisting vesicles were saturated with MBS, but not with Ch.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
This study examined the ability of purified gallbladder mucin to accelerate the nucleation of cholesterol monohydrate crystals from the cholesterol-transporting particles in supersaturated model bile. Mixed lipid micelles and cholesterol-phosphatidylcholine vesicles in supersaturated model bile were separated by Sephadex G-200 column chromatography. Mixed lipid micelles prepared by column chromatography had a low cholesterol-phosphatidylcholine ratio (0.30) and did not spontaneously nucleate cholesterol monohydrate crystals. In contrast, vesicles prepared by column chromatography had a cholesterol-phosphatidylcholine ratio of 1.00 and nucleated cholesterol crystals rapidly (P less than 0.001). Nucleation of cholesterol crystals was significantly accelerated in a concentration- and time-dependent manner by purified bovine gallbladder mucin in cholesterol containing vesicles, but not in mixed lipid micelles (P less than 0.001). A rapid filtration binding assay demonstrated significant binding of cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine in vesicles to gallbladder mucin but only minimal binding of cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine in mixed micelles. These data indicate that gallbladder mucin binds cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine in vesicles and accelerates the nucleation of cholesterol monohydrate crystals from these cholesterol-transporting particles in supersaturated model bile.  相似文献   

16.
N A Mazer  M C Carey 《Biochemistry》1983,22(2):426-442
We have employed quasi-elastic light-scattering methods to characterize micellar aggregates and microprecipitates formed in aqueous solutions containing sodium taurocholate (TC), egg lecithin (L), and cholesterol (Ch). Particle size and polydispersity were studied as functions of Ch mole fraction (XCh = 0-15%), L/TC molar ratio (0-1.6), temperature (5-85 degrees C), and total lipid concentration (3 and 10 g/dL in 0.15 M NaCl). For XCh values below the established solubilization limits (XChmax) [Carey, M. C., & Small, D. M. (1978) J. Clin. Invest. 61, 998], added Ch has little influence on the size of simple TC micelles (type 1 systems), on the coexistence of simple and mixed TC-L micelles (type 2 systems), or on the growth of "mixed disc" TC-L micelles (type 3 systems). For supersaturated systems (XCh/XChmax greater than 1), 10 g/dL type 1 systems (L/TC = 0) exist as metastable micellar solutions even at XCh/XChmax = 5.3. Metastability is decreased in type 2 systems (0 less than L/TC less than 0.6), and "labile" microprecipitation occurs when XCh/XChmax exceeds approximately 1.6. In 10 g/dL mixtures, the microprecipitates initially range in size from 500 to 20000 A and later coalesce to form a buoyant macroscopic precipitate phase. In 3 g/dL mixtures, the microprecipitates are smaller (200-400 A) and remain as a stable, noncoalesced microdispersion. Transmission electron microscopy of the microprecipitates formed at both concentrations indicates a globular noncrystalline structure, and lipid analysis reveals the presence of cholesterol and lecithin in a molar ratio (Ch/L) of approximately 2/1, suggesting that the microprecipitates represent a metastable cholesterol-rich liquid-crystalline phase. In supersaturated type 3 systems (0.6 less than L/TC less than 2.0), the precipitate phase is a lecithin-rich liquid-crystalline phase which likewise coalesces in a 10 g/dL system but forms stable vesicle (liposomal) structures (600-800 A radius) in 3 g/dL systems. In conjunction with these experimental data, we present a quantitative thermodynamic analysis of Ch solubilization in model bile systems from which rigorous deductions of the free energy and enthalpy change for solubilization of cholesterol monohydrate in type 1 and type 2 systems are obtained. In addition, we employ homogeneous nucleation theory to analyze the origin of the metastable/labile limit in supersaturated systems and to deduce the interfacial tension between microprecipitates and solution. On the basis of these experimental data and theoretical analyses, we offer new hypotheses on the structure and physiology of bile and the pathogenesis of Ch gallstones. In particular, it is suggested that the "stable" microprecipitates observed in 3 g/dL type 2 systems may provide a secondary vehicle (in addition to micelles) for cholesterol transport in supersaturated hepatic bile.  相似文献   

17.
Nucleation time represents the terminal step in in vitro studies examining bile lithogenicity. Because of the concern that residual microcrystals, left after ultracentrifugation, may be responsible for the rapid nucleation time of gallbladder bile from patients with cholesterol gallstones, we have included a final filtration step. However, we found this procedure to considerably lengthen the nucleation time of abnormal biles. In view of the central importance of the nucleation assay we compared the effect of three commonly used gallbladder bile pre-treatment regimes (designed to remove endogenous crystals) on nucleation time. They were: a) immediate filtration of bile (0.22 micron filter); b) ultracentrifugation; and c) ultracentrifugation followed by filtration. The respective nucleation times were: a) 9.3 +/- 3.7 days, n = 6; b) 2.9 +/- 0.4 days, n = 10; c) 12.8 +/- 2.3 days, n = 11. To determine whether the dramatic change in nucleation time was due to the removal of components other than seed crystals, we examined the mucus content, the total lipid composition of bile, and that of its cholesterol transport components following the different pre-treatments. No significant difference in total lipid, percentage cholesterol carried by the transport components, or their cholesterol/phospholipid ratio were found. Ultracentrifugation alone was sufficient to removal all detectable large molecular weight mucus glycoprotein. Although nucleation time of the abnormal gallbladder samples was extended in the ultracentrifuged/filtered biles, it was still significantly different (P less than 0.01) from that of normal gallbladder biles, confirming an intrinsic difference between abnormal and normal biles, in cholesterol metastability. We also examined the effect of protein digestion on the nucleation time of native biles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Because gallstones form so frequently in human bile, pathophysiologically relevant supersaturated model biles are commonly employed to study cholesterol crystal formation. We used cryo-transmission electron microscopy, complemented by polarizing light microscopy, to investigate early stages of cholesterol nucleation in model bile. In the system studied, the proposed microscopic sequence involves the evolution of small unilamellar to multilamellar vesicles to lamellar liquid crystals and finally to cholesterol crystals. Small aliquots of a concentrated (total lipid concentration = 29.2 g/dl) model bile containing 8.5% cholesterol, 22.9% egg yolk lecithin, and 68.6% taurocholate (all mole %) were vitrified at 2 min to 20 days after fourfold dilution to induce supersaturation. Mixed micelles together with a category of vesicles denoted primordial, small unilamellar vesicles of two distinct morphologies (sphere/ellipsoid and cylinder/arachoid), large unilamellar vesicles, multilamellar vesicles, and cholesterol monohydrate crystals were imaged. No evidence of aggregation/fusion of small unilamellar vesicles to form multilamellar vesicles was detected. Low numbers of multilamellar vesicles were present, some of which were sufficiently large to be identified as liquid crystals by polarizing light microscopy. Dimensions, surface areas, and volumes of spherical/ellipsoidal and cylindrical/arachoidal vesicles were quantified. Early stages in the separation of vesicles from micelles, referred to as primordial vesicles, were imaged 23-31 min after dilution. Observed structures such as enlarged micelles in primordial vesicle interiors, segments of bilayer, and faceted edges at primordial vesicle peripheries are probably early stages of small unilamellar vesicle assembly. A decrease in the mean surface area of spherical/ellipsoidal vesicles was correlated with the increased production of cholesterol crystals at 10-20 days after supersaturation by dilution, supporting the role of small unilamellar vesicles as key players in cholesterol nucleation and as cholesterol donors to crystals. This is the first visualization of an intermediate structure that has been temporally linked to the development of small unilamellar vesicles in the separation of vesicles from micelles in a model bile and suggests a time-resolved system for further investigation.  相似文献   

19.
Human bile contains a factor with cholesterol nucleation-promoting activity that binds to concanavalin A-Sepharose. In this study we have investigated the effect of this activity on the dynamics of lipid solubilization in supersaturated model bile. A concanavalin A binding protein fraction of human bile was mixed with model bile and the effect on the distribution of cholesterol and phospholipid between mixed micelles and phospholipid/cholesterol vesicles was studied by means of density gradient ultracentrifugation. The nucleation-promoting activity containing fraction induced a transfer of cholesterol and phospholipid from the micellar to the vesicular phase. This led to a decrease in the density of the vesicular fraction. We have also studied the effect of promoting activity on the nucleation time of an isolated vesicle fraction. A decrease of the nucleation time of 10.7 +/- 1.3 to 2.3 +/- 0.3 days was observed. In conclusion, a concanavalin A binding protein fraction from human bile stimulated cholesterol nucleation via a double effect; it increased the amount of vesicular cholesterol and phospholipid, and it also directly induced nucleation of cholesterol from the vesicles.  相似文献   

20.
The amount of cholesterol (Ch) crystals formed in supersaturated taurochenodeoxycholate (TCDC) - lecithin (L) solutions of the same Ch saturation index (CSI) but at different Ch thermodynamic activities (Ch AT) was quantified at different time intervals. The initial Ch nucleation rate (i.e., amount of Ch crystals formed with respect to time) in a Ch AT = 1.73 and TCDC to L molar ratio (TCDC:L) = 5.1 system was faster than that in a Ch AT = 1.42 and TCDC:L = 3.4 system. Shaking could enhance the early appearance of Ch crystals and cause the fast initial Ch nucleation rates for the TCDC:L = 5.1 and the TCDC:L = 3.4 systems. The final Ch nucleation rates were faster than the initial Ch nucleation rates for the TCDC:L = 5.1 and the TCDC:L = 3.4 systems. According to a light scattering analysis of vesicle concentration in supersaturated TCDC–L solutions, vesicles provide nucleation sites only in the Ch nucleation process and the vesicle concentration may not be an important factor for the Ch nucleation rate. A model of a mixed TCDC–L micelle releasing Ch molecules together with the surface area of Ch crystals formed was used in the interpretation of the Ch nucleation.  相似文献   

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