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1.
A preparation of cerebral microvessels was used to demonstrate the presence of lipoprotein lipase and acid lipase activity in the microvasculature of rabbit brain. Microvessels, consisting predominantly of capillaries, small arterioles, and venules, were islated from rabbit brain. Homogenates were assayed for lipolytic activity using a glycerol-stabilized trioleoylglycerol-phospholipid emulsion as substrate. Lipoprotein lipase activity was characterized with this substrate by previously established criteria including an alkaline pH optimum, increased activity in the presence of heparin and heat-inactivated plasma, and reduced activity in the presence of NaCl and protamine sulfate. A different substrate, containing trioleoylglycerol incorporated into phospholipid vesicles, was used to reveal acid lipase activity that was not affected by heparin, plasma, NaCl, or protamine sulfate. Lipoprotein lipase did not show activity with the vesicle preparation as substrate. Intact microvessels, when incubated in the presence of heparin, release lipoprotein lipase into the incubation solution. In contrast, release of acid lipase activity from intact microvessels was not dependent on heparin. The data show the presence of both lipoprotein lipase and acid lipase in brain microvessels and suggest that lipoproteins are metabolized within the cerebral vasculature.  相似文献   

2.
Following its secretion into the plasma compartment, the high-density lipoprotein (HDL) is presumed to be acted upon by both soluble enzymes, such as lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), and membrane-associated enzymes, such as lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase. Rats were injected intravenously with heparin to release membrane-associated lipolytic activities into the circulation and the collected plasma was incubated overnight at 37 degrees C in the presence or absence of an LCAT inhibitor or an inhibitor of lipoprotein lipase (1 M NaCl). It was observed that lipoprotein lipase accounted for most of the triglyceride hydrolase activity in the heparin-treated plasma, and that the heparin-releasable activities caused an increase in HDL density but no measurable change in particle size when LCAT was inhibited. Heparin treatment caused about a 60% decrease in plasma triacylglycerol during the interval between injection of heparin and blood collection. Although this caused marked compositional changes in the d less than 1.063 g/ml lipoproteins, no changes were observed in the lipid composition or apoprotein distribution in the HDL. Subsequent incubation for 18 h at 37 degrees C produced marked increases in the apoE content of HDL from heparin-treated plasma even when LCAT was inhibited. Time-course studies showed that in the presence of an LCAT inhibitor there was considerable conversion of phosphatidylcholine to lysophosphatidylcholine in heparin-treated plasma, and that this activity was diminished by 1 M NaCl, but that no phospholipolysis was observed in control plasma. By contrast, both heparin-treated and control plasma possessed substantial triglyceride hydrolase activity. The concurrent action of lipases and LCAT was observed to reduce the maximum level of cholesterol esterification which could be achieved in the absence of lipase activity. It is concluded that changes in HDL particle size are mainly attributable to LCAT, but that lipase activities, which are either free in rat plasma or releasable by heparin, play a role in restructuring the phospholipid moiety and altering the protein composition of the HDL, especially with respect to apoE, a potential ligand to cellular receptors.  相似文献   

3.
Lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase were measured in rat plasma using specific antisera. Mean values for lipoprotein lipase in adult rats were 1.8-3.6 mU/ml, depending on sex and nutritional state. Values for hepatic lipase were about three times higher. Lipoprotein lipase activity in plasma of newborn rats was 2-4-times higher than in adults. In contrast, hepatic lipase activity was lower in newborn than in adult rats. Following functional hepatectomy there was a progressive increase in lipoprotein lipase activity in plasma, indicating that transport of the enzyme from peripheral tissues to the liver normally takes place. Lipoprotein lipase, but not hepatic lipase, increased in plasma after a fat meal. An even more marked increase, up to 30 mU/ml, was seen after intravenous injection of Intralipid. Plasma lipase activity decreased in parallel with clearing of the injected triacylglycerol. 125I-labeled lipoprotein lipase injected intravenously during the hyperlipemia disappeared somewhat slower from the circulation than in fasted rats, but the uptake was still primarily in the liver. Hyperlipemia, or injection of heparin, led to increased lipoprotein lipase activity in the liver. This was seen even when the animals had been pretreated with cycloheximide to inhibit synthesis of new enzyme protein. These results suggest that during hypertriglyceridemia lipoprotein lipase binds to circulating lipoproteins/lipid droplets which results in increased plasma levels of the enzyme and increased transport to the liver.  相似文献   

4.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase (H-TGL) are lipolytic activities found in postheparin plasma. A simple and precise method for the direct determination of LPL in postheparin plasma is described. Pre-incubations of this plasma (45--60 min at 26 degrees C) with sodium dodecyl sulfate (35--50 mM) in 0.2 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.2, results in the inactivation of H-TGL, while leaving LPL fully active. Direct determination of H-TGL is done in a separate aliquot of the same postheparin plasma sample using previously reported assay conditons that do not measure LPL. The sodium dodecyl sulfate-resistant lipolytic activity has the characteristics of LPL as judged by a) its activation by serum and by apolipoprotein C-II; b) its inactivation (over 90%) by 0.75 M NaCl; and c) its inactivation by a specific antiserum. No sodium dodecyl sulfate-resistant activity was found in postheparin plasma from a patient with LPL deficiency (primary type I hyperlipoproteinemia). An excellent correlation of values was obtained (r = 0.99) for 30 samples assayed after sodium dodecyl sulfate treatment and after immuno-inactivation of H-TGL. The intra-assay coefficient of variation was +/- 11% and 4% before and after normalization of values, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, a correlation was sought between the circulating lipoprotein lipase activity and nutritional state in the rat. In fed rats, the plasma lipoprotein lipase activity was between 30 and 120 munits/ml, whereas after an overnight fast in restraining cages, the lipoprotein lipase plasma levels were between 280 and 500 munits/ml. The plasma lipoprotein lipase activity was inhibited by a specific high titre goat antiserum to rat lipoprotein lipase. No effect of fasting was seen on the plasma hepatic triacylglycerol lipase. 6 h after fasting, adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase decreased maximally, but plasma lipoprotein lipase was not changed and rose only after 16 h. Thus, it seems that most of the lipoprotein lipase activity in the fasting plasma was related to the 3-fold rise in lipoprotein lipase activity in the heart, which may represent total muscle lipoprotein lipase. The increase in heart lipoprotein lipase was due in part to an increase in the t1/2 of the enzyme from 1.2 to 2.9 h. To determine whether the high plasma levels in the fasting rats might result from impaired clearance of the enzyme by the liver, functional hepatectomy was carried out. 15 min after hepatectomy, plasma lipoprotein lipase rose up to 20-fold in fed and about 6-fold in fasting rats. Lipoprotein lipase activity extracted by the liver was calculated to be 30-60 munits/ml in the fed and 171-247 munits/ml plasma per min in fasting rats. An increase in lipoprotein lipase activity in extrahepatic tissues (heart, lung, kidney, diaphragm and adrenal) occurred 30 min after hepatectomy in fed rats. The increase in heart lipoprotein lipase was due to an increase in heparin-releasable fraction. Since no impairment of hepatic clearance of circulating plasma lipoprotein lipase was found, the high fasting plasma lipoprotein lipase activity may be related to an increase in enzyme synthesis, decreased enzyme turnover and an expansion of the functional pool in tissues such as the heart and probably muscle. The present findings indicate that measurement of endogenous plasma lipoprotein lipase can provide information with respect to the size of the functional pool under normal and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

6.
1. Lipoprotein lipase activity was measured in heart homogenates and in heparin-releasable and non-releasable fractions of isolated perfused rat hearts, after the intravenous injection of Triton WR-1339. 2. In homogenates of hearts from starved, rats, lipoprotein lipase activity was significantly inhibited (P less than 0.001) 2h after the injection of Triton. This inhibition was restricted exclusively to the heparin-releasable fraction. Maximum inhibition occurred 30 min after the injection and corresponded to about 60% of the lipoprotein lipase activity that could be released from the heart during 30 s perfusion with heparin. 3. Hearts of Triton-treated starved rats were unable to take up and utilize 14C-labelled chylomicron triacylglycerol fatty acids, even though about 40% of heparin-releasable activity remained in the hearts. 4. It is concluded that Triton selectively inhibits the functional lipoprotein lipase, i.e. the enzyme directly involved in the hydrolysis of circulating plasma triacylglycerols. 5. Lipoprotein lipase activities measured in homogenates of soleus muscle of starved rats and adipose tissue of fed rats were decreased by 25 and 39% respectively after Triton injection. It is concluded that, by analogy with the heart, these Triton-inhibitable activities correspond to the functional lipoprotein lipase.  相似文献   

7.
Postheparin plasma lipolytic activity consists of two hydrolytic activities, hepatic triglyceride lipase and lipoprotein lipase. These two enzymes were separated and partially purified by means of ammonium sulfate precipitation and affinity chromatography using Sepharose with covalently linked heparin and concanavalin A, respectively. Antibodies were produced against hepatic triglyceride lipase and they did not cross react with lipoprotein lipase. Optimal conditions for selective precipitation of hepatic lipase and specific measurement of these two lipases were investigated. This method was applied to the study of 15 patients with hypertriglyceridemia and 8 patients with familial lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase deficiency of whom 6 also had a marked elevated plasma triglyceride concentration. All patients had normal values of hepatic plasma lipase. All 8 patients with Type I and 2 of 4 patients with Type V hyperlipoproteinemia had lipoprotein lipase activities that were markedly reduced. The patients with Type III hyperlipoproteinemia and all 8 patients with lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase deficiency also had normal lipoprotein lipase values. These studies emphasize the necessity for differentiating between triglyceride lipase activity of hepatic and extrahepatic origin in evaluating patients with impaired triglyceride metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
Whole-irradiated rabbit pre-heparin plasma had an important inhibitory effect on hepatic triacylglycerol lipase and lipoprotein lipase activities, whereas control rabbit pre-heparin plasma slightly inhibited hepatic triacylglycerol lipase activity at a high concentration and enhanced lipoprotein lipase activity. As some apolipoproteins were known to modulate these two lipolytic enzymes, the inhibitory effects of irradiated rabbit plasma were investigated in apolipoproteins. Three apolipoproteins, with isoelectric points of about 6.58, 6.44 and 6.12, characterized by their low content in threonine (threonine-poor apolipoproteins) were produced in high concentrations in rabbit VLDL and HDL after irradiation. The effects of these apolipoproteins on control rabbit post-heparin plasma hepatic triacylglycerol lipase and extrahepatic lipoprotein lipase were studied. Threonine-poor apolipoproteins substantially inhibited the hepatic triacylglycerol lipase activity and enhanced the apolipoprotein C-II-stimulated activity of lipoprotein lipase. The amounts of these apolipoproteins in triacylglycerol-rich lipoprotein particles may determine the lipolytic activity of lipoprotein lipase and hepatic triacylglycerol lipase in triacylglycerol hydrolysis. The existence of another inhibitor of lipoprotein lipase remains to be determined.  相似文献   

9.
Lipoprotein lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) from rat adipose tissue was purified by affinity chromatography with heparin-Sepharose. Elution was carried out with buffered solutions of increasing NaCl molarity. Proteins without affinity for heparin were eluted with 0.5 M NaCl, while lipoprotein lipase activity was eluted as two peaks with 1.16 M NaCl (In earlier work on human adipose tissue (Etienne et al. (1974) C.R. Acad. Sc. Paris 279, 1487-1490) two fractions with lipoprotein lipase activity were also obtained). Phospholipase activity was detected in the fraction eluted with buffered 0.5 M NaCl and containing proteins without affinity for heparin. On feeding the fasting rats with fresh cream or glucose two peaks were also obtained, but the first peak had clearly increased while the second one had remained virtually unchanged.  相似文献   

10.
Avian granulosa cells cultured as a homogeneous parenchymal population contain lipolytic activity. This activity is stimulated 2--5-fold by serum, inhibited 90% by 1 M NaCl and inhibited 80% by specific anti-lipoprotein lipase immunoglobulins. 85% of the activity binds to heparin-Sepharose 4B, and 70% of bound activity is eluted with 1.5 M NaCl. Thus, the lipolytic activity of cultured granulosa cells is lipoprotein lipase. Granulosa cells were shown to synthesize lipoprotein lipase in culture by incorporating [3H]leucine into the enzyme protein, as measured with an immunoadsorption technique. Finally, colchicine was shown to increase intracellular lipolytic activity, suggesting an inhibition of secretion of this enzyme by cultured granulosa cells.  相似文献   

11.
1. Lipoprotein lipase (EC 3.1.1.34), which was previously shown to bind to immobilized heparin, was now found to bind also to heparan sulphate and dermatan sulphate and to some extent to chondroitin sulphate. 2. The relative binding affinities were compared by determining (a) the concentration of NaCl required to release the enzyme from polysaccharide-substituted Sepharose; (b) the concentration of free polysaccharides required to displace the enzyme from immobilized polysaccharides; and (c) the total amounts of enzyme bound after saturation of immobilized polysaccharides. By each of these criteria heparin bound the enzyme most efficiently, followed by heparan sulphate and dermatan sulphate, which were more efficient than chondroitin sulphate. 3. Heparin fractions with high and low affinity for antithrombin, respectively, did not differ with regard to affinity for lipoprotein lipase. 4. Partially N-desulphated heparin (40–50% of N-unsubstituted glucosamine residues) was unable to displace lipoprotein lipase from immobilized heparin. This ability was restored by re-N-sulphation or by N-acetylation; the N-acetylated product was essentially devoid of anticoagulant activity. 5. Partial depolymerization of heparin led to a decrease in ability to displace lipoprotein lipase from heparin–Sepharose; however, even fragments of less than decasaccharide size showed definite enzyme-releasing activity. 6. Studies with hepatic lipase (purified from rat post-heparin plasma) gave results similar to those obtained with milk lipoprotein lipase. However, the interaction between the hepatic lipase and the glycosaminoglycans was weaker and was abolished at lower concentrations of NaCl. 7. The ability of the polysaccharides to release lipoprotein lipase to the circulating blood after intravenous injection into rats essentially conformed to their affinity for the enzyme as evaluated by the experiments in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
Total plasma postheparin lipolytic activity as well as lipoprotein lipase activity in plasma was higher after heparin injection in thyroidectomized rats than in controls. In contrast, the activity of liver lipase was lower in thyroidectomized rats. Adipose tissue from thyroidectomized rats contained more lipoprotein lipase activity than adipose tissue from controls as measured both in extracts of tissue homogenates and medium from in vitro incubations of tissue pieces. There were no differences between control and hypothyroid rats in the disappearance of intravenously injected 125I-labeled lipoprotein lipase, but when a low dose of heparin was injected before the labeled enzyme, the disappearance of 125I-labeled lipoprotein lipase was more retarded in thyroidectomized rats. The elimination of heparin itself was slightly retarded by thyroidectomy.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the lipase released into the circulation by polymetaphosphate injection into rats. Lipase release was in proportion to the dose injected. The post-polymetaphosphate lipase was almost completely inhibited by high salt concentrations or by addition of protamine sulfate to the assay system suggesting that this compound released lipoprotein lipase and not hepatic triglyceride lipase. The lipases released by polymetaphosphate and by heparin were compared using a heparin-sepharose affinity column technique which separates lipoprotein lipase from hepatic triglyceride lipase. While heparin released both lipoprotein lipase and hepatic triglyceride lipase, polymetaphosphate released almost exclusively lipoprotein lipase. Other experiments showed that neither polymetaphosphate nor heparin inhibited the hepatic lipase when added to the assay. These results suggest that lipoprotein lipase may be released by the negative charge on these high-charge polymers while hepatic triglyceride lipase release may require the specific sugar configuration of heparin.  相似文献   

14.
A rabbit antiserum prepared against the serum-stimulated lipase (lipoprotein lipase) from bovine milk crossreacted with serum-stimulated lipases from human milk and from human postheparin plasma, but not with bile salt-stimulated lipase from human milk or with salt-resistant lipase from human postheparin plasma. Thus, the serum-stimulated lipase in bovine milk has immunological determinants in common with the serum-stimulated lipases in human milk and in human postheparin plasma. The time-courses for the appearance of serum-stimulated lipase and salt-resistant lipase activities in human plasma after heparin injection were different. The two activities were separated by heparin-Sepharose chromatography. After treatment of postherapin plasma with the antiserum only the salt-resistant lipase activity could be eluted from the column. Thus, these two enyzme activities in postheparin plasma reside in two different enzyme molecules.  相似文献   

15.
A lipoprotein lipase in the bovine arterial wall has been identified and partially characterized. The enzyme has a Km apparent of 1 mM for triolein in a phosphatidylcholine stabilized emulsion. The lipase was stimulated 20- to 30-fold by the addition of heated rat plasma to the assay medium. The activity exhibited a pH optimum at 8.6. Protamine sulfate (1.0 mg/ml) inhibited the activity by 50%, whereas 1.4 M sodium chloride inhibited by 85%. Sodium fluoride, an inhibitor of the hormone-sensitive lipase, had no effect on the activity. Additions of low concentrations of heparin or Ca-2+ to the enzyme caused a slight stimulation of the lipolytic activity. A crude sectioning of the aorta revealed specific activity of lipoprotein lipase to be highest at the endothelial side of the artery.  相似文献   

16.
Characterization of the lipolytic activity of endothelial lipase   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Endothelial lipase (EL) is a new member of the triglyceride lipase gene family previously reported to have phospholipase activity. Using radiolabeled lipid substrates, we characterized the lipolytic activity of this enzyme in comparison to lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic lipase (HL) using conditioned medium from cells infected with recombinant adenoviruses encoding each of the enzymes. In the absence of serum, EL had clearly detectable triglyceride lipase activity. Both the triglyceride lipase and phospholipase activities of EL were inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by the addition of serum. The ratio of triglyceride lipase to phospholipase activity of EL was 0.65, compared with ratios of 24.1 for HL and 139.9 for LPL, placing EL at the opposite end of the lipolytic spectrum from LPL. Neither lipase activity of EL was influenced by the addition of apolipoprotein C-II (apoC-II), indicating that EL, like HL, does not require apoC-II for activation. Like LPL but not HL, both lipase activities of EL were inhibited by 1 M NaCl. The relative ability of EL, versus HL and LPL, to hydrolyze lipids in isolated lipoprotein fractions was also examined using generation of FFAs as an end point. As expected, based on the relative triglyceride lipase activities of the three enzymes, the triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, chylomicrons, VLDL, and IDL, were efficiently hydrolyzed by LPL and HL. EL hydrolyzed HDL more efficiently than the other lipoprotein fractions, and LDL was a poor substrate for all of the enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Within the first day in culture, human monocytes begin to synthesize and secrete a triglyceride lipase. The designation of this activity as lipoprotein lipase is based upon: 1) a requirement of serum or apolipoprotein C-II for full activity; 2) inhibition by 1M NaCl or apolipoprotein C-III2; 3) a pH optimum of 8; and 4) binding to endothelial cells that is releasable by heparin. The enzyme also exhibits immunological cross reactivity with antibody to purified bovine milk lipoprotein lipase as does human postheparin plasma lipoprotein lipase. Lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes do not appear to contain this enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Lipoprotein lipase was purified from bovine milk and labeled with 125I. After intravenous injection to rats the labeled lipase rapidly disappeared from the blood. The initial half-life was about 1 min and more than 70% of the radioactivity was found in the liver at 10 min. 30 min after the injection about 10% of the injected radioactivity was present in acid-soluble form in blood, indicating that the enzyme had been rapidly degraded. Injection of asialofetuin, ribonuclease B or mannan in amounts known to block the hepatic receptors for glycoproteins with exposed galactose, N-acetylglucosamine or mannose residues did not retard the removal of the lipoprotein lipase. Thus, some other, as yet undefined, receptor is implicated. Lipoprotein lipase is known to bind to heparin and some related polysacchrides. Heparin injected before the enzyme delayed its removal and heparin injected after the enzyme caused an immediate increase in blood radioactivity, signifying return from tissues to blood of labeled enzyme. Lipoprotein lipase is present at the endothelium in several extrahepatic tissues and is rapidly turned over. Its presence in blood in appreciable amounts would cause a derangement of lipid transport. The efficient hepatic removal of the enzyme may thus serve an important physiological purpose in keeping the blood levels of this enzyme low.  相似文献   

19.
Lipoprotein lipase synthesized by cultured rat preadipocytes is present in three compartments: an intracellular, a surface-related 3-min heparin-releasable, and that secreted into the culture medium. 30 min after addition of 6 microM monensin, the lipoprotein lipase activity in the heparin-releasable compartment starts to decrease; by 4 h of monensin treatment the lipoprotein lipase activity in the heparin-releasable pool and in the culture medium is about 10% of that found in control dishes. The intracellular activity, which had been identified as lipoprotein lipase by an antiserum to lipoprotein lipase, increases slowly and doubles by 24 h. However, since the cellular compartment accounts for 10-25% of total activity, this increase does not account for the missing enzyme activity. To determine whether this enzyme molecule is synthesized but is not active, incorporation of labeled leucine, mannose and galactose into immunoadsorbable lipoprotein lipase was studied in control, monensin- or tunicamycin-treated cells. Addition of tunicamycin (5 micrograms/ml) for 24 h caused a 30-50% reduction in immunoadsorbable lipoprotein lipase, but the enzyme activity was reduced by 90%. On the other hand, 4 h monensin treatment reduced both incorporation of [3H]leucine into immunoadsorbable lipoprotein lipase and heparin-releasable and medium lipoprotein lipase activity by 57 to 77%. The immunoadsorbable lipoprotein lipase in the intracellular compartment has a [14C]mannose to [3H]galactose ratio of 0.15 and this ratio increased 6-fold in monensin-treated cells. The intracellular lipoprotein lipase in monensin-treated cells had the same affinity for both the native and synthetic substrate as the lipoprotein lipase in control cells, yet its spontaneous secretion into the culture medium and its release by 3 min heparin treatment was markedly decreased. The present results indicate that: the presence of asparagine-linked oligosaccharide (formation of which is inhibited by tunicamycin) is mandatory for the expression of lipoprotein lipase activity; lipoprotein lipase is active also in a high mannose form; and terminal glycosylation and oligosaccharide processing, which is inhibited by monensin, may be important for the appearance of heparin-releasable lipoprotein lipase and secretion of lipoprotein lipase into the medium.  相似文献   

20.
3T3-L1 adipocytes in culture incorporated [35S]methionine into a protein which could be immunoprecipitated with chicken antiserum to bovine lipoprotein lipase. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed this protein had an Mr of 55,000, similar to that of bovine lipoprotein lipase, and accounted for 0.1-0.5% of total protein synthesis in the adipocytes. Lipoprotein lipase protein was present in small amounts in confluent 3T3-L1 fibroblasts, and the amount increased many-fold as the cells differentiated into adipocytes. This increase was accompanied by parallel increases in cellular lipase activity and secretion. When cells were grown with [35S]methionine, the amount of label incorporated into lipoprotein lipase increased for 2 h and then leveled off. Pulse-chase experiments showed that half-life of newly synthesized lipase was about 1 h. Turnover of lipoprotein lipase in control cells involved both release to the medium and intracellular degradation. When N-linked glycosylation was blocked by tunicamycin, the cells synthesized a form of lipase that had a smaller Mr (48,000), was catalytically inactive, and was not released to the medium. Radioimmunoassay demonstrated that 3T3-L1 adipocytes contained an unexpectedly large amount of lipoprotein lipase protein. 55% of the enzyme protein in acetone/ether powder of the cells was insoluble in 50 mM NH3/NH4Cl at pH 8.1, a solution commonly used to extract lipoprotein lipase; 27% of the lipase protein was soluble but did not bind to heparin-Sepharose and had very low lipase activity; and the remaining 13% was soluble, bound to heparin-Sepharose, and had high lipolytic activity. About one-half of the lipase released spontaneously to the medium was inactive, and lipase inactivation proceeded in the medium with little loss of enzyme protein. Lipoprotein lipase released heparin, in contrast, was fully active and more stable. When protein synthesis was blocked by cycloheximide, the level of lipoprotein lipase activity in adipocytes decreased more rapidly than the amount of lipase protein in the cells. Most of the inactive lipoprotein lipase in adipocytes probably results from dissociation of active dimeric lipase, but some could be a precursor of active enzyme.  相似文献   

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