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1.
In this study we evaluated the time course and mechanism of low density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation induced by human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), cell-free medium (CFM) and Cu2+. After incubating LDL (200 μg/ml) with HUVECs, CFM and Cu2+ (concentration adjusted to obtain the same degree of LDL modification as with HUVECs), the extent of LDL lipid peroxidation and apoprotein B modification was monitored at different times from 0 to 24 h. This involved evaluating the time course of LDL conjugated diene, peroxide, malonyldialdehyde (MDA), fluorescence, relative electrophoretic mobility (REM), vitamin E and monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids. After incubation with HUVECs, the LDL REM was significantly higher than that obtained in CFM (p < 0.01). When balanced for the same degree of LDL modification as obtained with HUVECs, Cu2+ gave a REM similar to that obtained with HUVECs. At the different times of incubation there was no statistical difference between conjugated diene and peroxide values after incubation with HUVECs and with CFM. The values obtained with Cu2+ were significantly higher than those obtained with HUVECs and CFM (p < 0.01). MDA and LDL fluorescence were significantly higher after exposure to HUVECs than to CFM (p<0.01), values being similar to those obtained with Cu2+. There was no statistical difference between the values of LDL oleic, linoleic, arachidonic and eicosapentaenoic acids after incubation with HUVECs and CFM. Eicosatetraynoic acid (ETYA), a lipoxygenase inhibitor, determined dose-dependent reduction of MDA formation induced by the incubation of LDL with HUVECs; it did not affect LDL conjugated diene. ETYA did not have any effect on the MDA derived from LDL after incubation with Cu2+ or CFM. The results of this study demonstrate that, unlike Cu2+, the contribution of HUVECs to LDL modification does not involve only lipid peroxidation of the lipoprotein; it also includes intracellular radical and non-radical processes.  相似文献   

2.
Extracellular superoxide (O2-.) was detected in cultures of monkey arterial smooth muscle cells as measured by the superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of cytochrome c and acetylated cytochrome c. Reduction of cytochrome c by these cells required L-cystine in the incubation medium. A variety of other sulfur-containing amino acids, including D-cystine, L-cystathionine, L-methionine, and djenkolic acid did not support O2-. generation when present at concentrations equimolar to L-cystine. At millimolar concentrations, the chelators EDTA and diethylene triamine penta-acetic acid inhibited O2-. production by smooth muscle cells. This effect was maximal when the chelator was present at the same concentration as the sum of the Ca2+ and Mg2+ in the medium, suggesting a role for these cations in O2-. generation by cells. Modification of low density lipoprotein (LDL) by arterial smooth muscle cells, as assessed by changes in lipid peroxide content, mobility on agarose gel electrophoresis, and apoprotein B fragmentation, was also L-cystine-dependent. LDL modification also required micromolar concentrations of the transition metal ion Cu(II) or Fe(III) and was inhibited by superoxide dismutase. LDL modified by smooth muscle cells in the presence of L-cystine and Cu(II) was taken up and degraded less well than native LDL by human skin fibroblasts, suggesting that recognition by the LDL receptor was lost. In contrast, LDL modified by smooth muscle cells was taken up and degraded to a greater degree than native LDL by mouse peritoneal macrophages, consistent with recognition by the scavenger receptor. These results indicate that monkey arterial smooth muscle cells produce O2-. and modify LDL by an L-cystine-dependent process. This may involve reduction of cystine to a thiol, possibly cysteine or a cysteine-containing peptide such as glutathione. Sulfur-containing amino acids may play a role in atherogenesis by supporting cell-mediated generation of reactive oxygen species and modification of lipoprotein to a form recognized by the scavenger receptor.  相似文献   

3.
A majority of the LDL preparations from various donors could be modified by incubation with endothelial cells from human arteries, veins and microvessels. These alterations comprise changes in electrophoretic mobility, buoyant density and lipid composition of LDL, the generation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in the medium, and a decrease in primary amino groups of LDL. Furthermore, the association of endothelial cell proteins with LDL was demonstrated by [35S]methionine incorporation and trichloroacetic acid precipitation of reisolated endothelial cell-modified LDL. After SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the reisolated modified LDL particles, radioactivity was mainly found at a molecular mass of 48 kDa and at one or two bands with a molecular mass of more than 100 kDa. The 48 kDa protein was identified as a latent plasminogen activator inhibitor. Cell viability was necessary for the cell-mediated LDL modification, which indicates that endothelial cells are actively involved in this process. The Ca2+ ionophore A23187 and monensin did not influence LDL modification. LDL modification was markedly inhibited by antioxidants. It was not prevented by cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase inhibitors, which indicates that non-enzymatic lipid peroxidation is involved. Transition metal- (copper-) induced lipid peroxidation results in similar physiochemical alterations of the LDL particle as found with endothelial cells; it is prevented by the presence of superoxide dismutase. In contrast, endothelial cell LDL modification was not influenced by superoxide dismutase. Catalase or singlet oxygen and hydroxyl radical scavengers also did not affect it. We suggest that yet unidentified radicals or lipid peroxides are generated in the cells or on the cell membrane and that these reactive molecule(s) will react with LDL after leaving the cell. HDL and lipoprotein-depleted serum prevented LDL modification markedly, and to a larger extent than that by copper ions. We speculate that LDL modification by endothelial cells will only occur under those conditions in which the balance between the generation of reactive oxygen molecules and the cellular protection against these reactive species is disturbed.  相似文献   

4.
The role of high density lipoproteins (HDL), their subfractions (HDL2 and HDL3) and lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) on peroxidative modification of low density lipoproteins (LDL) in vitro was studied. Peroxidative modification was estimated by the formation of malonic dialdehyde (MDA) and LDL aggregates during LDL incubation at 37 degrees C for several days without Fe2+ or for 2 hours in the presence of Fe2+ in EDTA-free media. It was shown that the addition of HDL3 (but not HDL2) markedly decreases the formation of both MDA and LDL aggregates. Since LCAT is bound to HDL3, its effect was examined. An addition of LCAT isolated from human plasma (650-fold purification) at a concentration of 450 micrograms/ml resulted in a complete inhibition of LDL peroxidation and LDL aggregate formation. Heat-inactivated LCAT had no effect. Possible mechanisms of the protective effect of LCAT on LDL peroxidative modification are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Summary

Lipid peroxidation and subsequent oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) have been implicated as causal events in atherosclerosis. Cu2+ may play an important role in LDL oxidation by binding to histidine residues of apolipoprotein B-100 (apo B) and initiating and propagating lipid peroxidation. To investigate the role of histidine residues, we used diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), a lipid-soluble histidine-specific modifying reagent. When LDL (0.1 mg protein/ml, or 0.2 µM) was incubated with DEPC (1 mM), at least 76 ± 7% of the histidine residues in apo B were modified. Treatment of LDL with DEPC led to an increase in the rate of Cu2+-induced initiation of lipid peroxidation (Ri), but a significant decrease in the rate of propagation. These changes resulted in an overall increased resistance of LDL to oxidation, with a significantly increased lag phase preceding the propagation phase of lipid peroxidation. In contrast to DEPC, ascorbate completely prevented the initiation of LDL oxidation (Ri = 0). Our data indicate that there are two types of copper/histidine binding sites on apo B: those facing the lipid core of the LDL particle, which mediate the propagation of lipid peroxidation and are modified by DEPC; and those found on the surface of the LDL particle exposed to the aqueous environment, which are responsible for mediating the initiation of lipid peroxidation and are modifiable by ascorbate in the presence of Cu2+.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal on freshly prepared human low-density lipoprotein (LDL) were studied. At a fixed LDL concentration (5.7 mg/ml) the amount of 4-hydroxynonenal incorporated into the LDL increased with increasing aldehyde concentration from 28-30 (0.2 mM) to 140 (1 mM) mol per mol LDL, whereas at a fixed aldehyde concentration (0.2 mM) its incorporation into LDL decreased with increasing LDL concentration from 48 (1 mg LDL/ml) to 26 (12 mg LDL/ml) mol 4-hydroxynonenal bound per mol LDL. Of the total hydroxynonenal taken up 78% was bound to the protein and 21% to the lipid moiety; the remaining 1% was dissolved as free aldehyde in the lipid fraction. Amino acid analysis of the apolipoprotein B revealed that 4-hydroxynonenal attacks mainly the lysine and tyrosine residues and to a lesser extent also serine, histidine and cysteine. Treatment of LDL with 4-hydroxynonenal results in a concentration-dependent increase of the negative charge of the LDL particle as evidenced by its increased electrophoretic mobility. Moreover, 4-hydroxynonenal treatment leads to a partial conversion of the apolipoprotein B-100 into higher molecular weight forms most probably apolipoproteins B-126 and B-151. Compared to malonaldehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal exhibits a much higher capacity to modify LDL and it is therefore believed that this aldehyde is a more likely candidate for being responsible for LDL modification under in vivo lipid peroxidation conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Low-molecular-weight aldehydes (glyoxal, methylglyoxal, 3-deoxyglucosone) generated on autooxidation of glucose under conditions of carbonyl stress react much more actively with amino groups of L-lysine and epsilon-amino groups of lysine residues of apoprotein B-100 in human blood plasma low density lipoproteins (LDL) than their structural analogs (malonic dialdehyde (MDA), 4-hydroxynonenal) resulting on free radical oxidation of lipids under conditions of oxidative stress. Glyoxal-modified LDL aggregate in the incubation medium with a significantly higher rate than LDL modified by MDA, and MDA-modified LDL are markedly more poorly absorbed by cultured human macrophages and significantly more slowly eliminated from the rat bloodstream upon intravenous injection. Studies on kinetics of free radical oxidation of rat liver membrane phospholipids have shown that ubiquinol Q(10) is the most active lipid-soluble natural antioxidant, and suppression of ubiquinol Q(10) biosynthesis by beta-hydroxy-beta-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins) is accompanied by intensification of lipid peroxidation in rat liver biomembranes and in LDL of human blood plasma. Injection of ubiquinone Q(10) protects the human blood plasma LDL against oxidation and prevents oxidative stress-induced damages to rat myocardium. A unified molecular mechanism of atherogenic action of carbonyl-modified LDL in disorders of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously reported that the spin trap alpha-phenyl-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN) inhibited the oxidative modification of low density lipoprotein (LDL) (Kalyanaraman, B., Antholine, W.E. and Parthasarathy, S. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1035, 286-292). In the present study, we report that 3,5-dibromo-4-nitrosobenzenesulfonic acid (DBNBS), a water-soluble spin trap, also inhibited the oxidation of LDL as measured by the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS). However, when compared with LDL incubated without DBNBS, the DBNBS-incubated LDL showed increased negative charge on agarose gel electrophoresis and was avidly degraded by mouse peritoneal macrophages. Despite the suggestion of biological modification, there was no decrease in lysine-amino groups in DBNBS-incubated LDL. Furthermore, reductively methylated LDL in which more than 85% of the amino group of lysines was blocked, was also modified by DBNBS. A sulfonic acid analog of PBN failed to modify LDL in a similar manner, suggesting that the presence of sulfonic acid alone does not ensure modification. When LDL was incubated with DBNBS, radical adducts associated with both lipid and protein were detected by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) technique. It is suggested that DBNBS may bind to the apoprotein B100 and lipids of LDL by a lysine-independent mechanism resulting in increased recognition and degradation by macrophages. The present work offers a novel approach for rapid modification of LDL.  相似文献   

9.
Oxidative modification of human low-density lipoprotein (LDL) renders it atherogenic. Previous studies demonstrated that plasma thiols promote oxidation of LDL by free ferric iron (Fe3+). The current study investigated effects of plasma thiols on oxidation of LDL by hemin, a physiological Fe3+-protoporphyrin IX complex thought to be capable of initiating LDL oxidation in vivo. In contrast to free Fe3+ which is incapable of oxidizing LDL in the absence of an exogenous reductant, hemin readily promoted LDL oxidation. During incubation of LDL (0.2 mg of protein/ml) with hemin (10 microM) at 37 degrees C for 6 h, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), a marker of lipid oxidation, increased from 0.3 (+/-0.1) nmol/mg of LDL protein to a maximal concentration of 45.8 (+/-5.2) nmol/mg of LDL protein. Under the same experimental conditions, lipid-conjugated dienes, another marker of lipid oxidation, increased from non-detectable to near-maximal levels of 78-187 nmol/mg of LDL protein, and lipoprotein polyunsaturated fatty acyl-containing cholesteryl ester content decreased to 15-36% of that present in native (i.e. unoxidized) LDL. Continued incubation of LDL with hemin for up to 24 h resulted in no further significant alterations in lipoprotein levels of TBARS, lipid-conjugated dienes, and cholesteryl esters. In addition to these chemical modifications indicative of lipoprotein oxidation, agarose gel electrophoretic analysis indicated that exposure of LDL to hemin resulted in conversion of the lipoprotein to an atherogenic form as evidenced by its increased anodic electrophoretic mobility. Addition of physiological concentrations of plasma thiols (either cysteine, homocysteine or reduced glutathione; 1-100 microM, each) inhibited hemin-mediated oxidation of LDL. Thus, whereas the maximal TBARS concentration was achieved following 6 h of incubation of LDL with hemin alone, addition of thiol extended the time required to attain maximal TBARS concentration to > or = 12 h. Similar antioxidant effects of thiols on formation of lipid-conjugated dienes, loss of cholesteryl esters, and lipoprotein anodic electrophoretic mobility were also observed. However, all thiols were not equally effective at inhibiting hemin-dependent LDL oxidation. Thus, whereas reduced glutathione was most effective at inhibiting hemin-dependent LDL oxidation, an intermediate effect was observed for homocysteine, and cysteine was least effective. The inhibition of hemin-mediated LDL oxidation by plasma thiols reported here confirms a previous observation that, under certain conditions, thiols can function as antioxidants, but contrasts with the previously documented pro-oxidant effect of the same thiols on oxidation of LDL by free Fe3+. These contrasting effects of plasma thiols on hemin- and free Fe3+-mediated LDL oxidation indicate that, in vivo, the ability of thiols to function as either anti- or pro-oxidants during LDL oxidation may, at least in part, be determined by the type of oxidant stress to which the lipoprotein is exposed.  相似文献   

10.
Oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is a pivotal process in early atherogenesis and can be brought about by myeloperoxidase (MPO), which is capable of reacting with nitrite, a NO metabolite. We studied MPO-mediated formation of conjugated dienes in isolated human LDL in dependence on the concentrations of nitrite and chloride. This reaction was strongly stimulated by low concentrations (5-50 microM) of nitrite which corresponds to the reported concentration in the arterial vessel wall. Under these conditions no protein tyrosine nitration occurred; this reaction required much higher nitrite concentrations (100 microM-1 mM). Chloride neither supported lipid peroxidation alone nor was its presence mandatory for the effect of nitrite. We propose a prominent role of lipid peroxidation for the proatherogenic action of the MPO/nitrite system, whereas peroxynitrite may be competent for protein tyrosine nitration of LDL. Monomeric and oligomeric flavan-3-ols present in cocoa products effectively counteracted, at micromolar concentrations, the MPO/nitrite-mediated lipid peroxidation of LDL. Flavan-3-ols also suppressed protein tyrosine nitration induced by MPO/nitrite or peroxynitrite as well as Cu2+-mediated lipid peroxidation of LDL. This multi-site protection by (-)-epicatechin or other flavan-3-ols against proatherogenic modification of LDL may contribute to the purported beneficial effects of dietary flavan-3-ols for the cardiovascular system.  相似文献   

11.
Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is oxidized by cellular and noncellular mechanisms, both leading to an increased binding to collagen. We have investigated the effect of serum on lipid peroxidation, apoprotein oxidation and the binding of oxidized apoprotein to collagen. During noncellular oxidation, lipoprotein-deficient serum strongly inhibited all three processes. The serum fraction of M(r) > 100,000 was equally inhibitory; this effect was not due to alpha 1 or gamma globulins, alpha 2 macroglobulins, haptoglobins or ceruloplasmin. The serum fraction of M(r) 30,000-100,000 stimulated the binding of oxidized apoprotein but the albumin in this fraction inhibited lipid peroxidation and apoprotein oxidation. Serum ultrafiltrate (M(r) < 1000) inhibited lipid and protein oxidation, and binding; the inhibitory effect was abolished by deionization which removed histidine. The effects of lipoprotein-deficient serum and its fractions on cellular oxidation were similar but weaker than those on noncellular oxidation, HDL inhibited noncellular oxidation as well as binding of oxidized apoprotein. VLDL also inhibited oxidation; this could not be accounted for by its content of apo B. If present in vivo, these inhibitory effects would completely suppress both cellular and noncellular oxidation of LDL and its subsequent binding to collagen.  相似文献   

12.
The oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is suggested to play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The present study examined the role of the formation of LDL-copper (Cu) complex in the peroxidation of LDL. The amount of copper bound to LDL increased during incubation performed with increasing concentrations of CuSO4. More than 80% of the copper bound to the LDL particle was observed in the protein phase of LDL, suggesting that most of the copper ions formed complexes with the ligand-binding sites of apoprotein. The addition of histidine (1 mM), known to form a high affinity complex with copper, and EDTA (1 mM), a metal chelator, during the incubation of LDL with CuSO4 prevented the formation of both thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) and LDL-Cu complexes. EDTA inhibited the copper-catalyzed ascorbate oxidation whereas histidine had no effect, suggesting that the copper within the complex with histidine is available to catalyze the reaction, in contrast to EDTA. These observations indicate that the preventive effect of histidine on the copper-catalyzed peroxidation of LDL is not simply mediated by chelating free copper ions in aqueous phase. Evidence that copper bound to LDL particle still has a redox potential was provided by the observed increase in TBARS content during incubation of LDL-Cu complexes in the absence of free copper ions. The addition of either histidine or EDTA to LDL-Cu complexes inhibited the formation of TBARS by removing copper ions from the LDL forming the corresponding complexes. However, there still remained small amounts of copper in the LDL particles following the treatment of LDL-Cu complexes with histidine or EDTA. The copper ions remaining in the LDL particle lacked the ability to catalyze LDL peroxidation, suggesting that there may be two types of copper binding sites in LDL: tight-binding sites, from which the copper ions are not removed by chelation, and weak-binding sites, from which copper ions are easily removed by chelators. The formation of TBARS in the LDL preparation during incubation with CuSO4 was comparable to the incubation with FeSO4. In contrast, the formation of TBARS in the LDL-lipid micelles by CuSO4 was nearly eliminated even in the presence of ascorbate to promote metal-catalyzed lipid peroxidation, although a marked increase in TBARS content was observed in the LDL-lipid micelles with FeSO4, and with FeCl3 in the presence of ascorbate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and subsequent alteration of endothelial cell function are generally accepted as an important early event in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. To understand the mechanism by which oxidized LDL (oxLDL) causes dysfunction in endothelial cells, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were exposed to oxLDL at a concentration that induces cellular dysfunction, and proteomic analysis was carried out, together with the analysis of cellular lipid peroxidation products. Time-dependent accumulation of 7-ketocholesterol and the progression of oxidative modification of peroxiredoxin 2 were observed, together with the suppression of cell proliferation. Proteomic analysis using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-D gel) revealed that nucleophosmin, stathmin, and nucleolin were differentially expressed after exposure to oxLDL. Both 2-D gel and western blot analyses revealed that (1) nucleophosmin was dephosphorylated in a time-dependent manner; (2) stathmin was transiently phosphorylated at 6 h, and the unphosphorylated form was continuously down-regulated; and (3) nucleolin was identified as a 20-kDa fragment and a 76-kDa form, which were down-regulated. These observations suggest that the exposure of HUVEC to oxLDL results in the suppression of cell proliferation, which is ascribed to protein modification and/or altered expression of nucleophosmin, stathmin, and nucleolin under these oxidative stress conditions.  相似文献   

14.
The oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and subsequent alteration of endothelial cell function are generally accepted as an important early event in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. To understand the mechanism by which oxidized LDL (oxLDL) causes dysfunction in endothelial cells, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were exposed to oxLDL at a concentration that induces cellular dysfunction, and proteomic analysis was carried out, together with the analysis of cellular lipid peroxidation products. Time-dependent accumulation of 7-ketocholesterol and the progression of oxidative modification of peroxiredoxin 2 were observed, together with the suppression of cell proliferation. Proteomic analysis using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-D gel) revealed that nucleophosmin, stathmin, and nucleolin were differentially expressed after exposure to oxLDL. Both 2-D gel and western blot analyses revealed that (1) nucleophosmin was dephosphorylated in a time-dependent manner; (2) stathmin was transiently phosphorylated at 6 h, and the unphosphorylated form was continuously down-regulated; and (3) nucleolin was identified as a 20-kDa fragment and a 76-kDa form, which were down-regulated. These observations suggest that the exposure of HUVEC to oxLDL results in the suppression of cell proliferation, which is ascribed to protein modification and/or altered expression of nucleophosmin, stathmin, and nucleolin under these oxidative stress conditions.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of salt concentration gradient (inside to outside) on the lipid peroxidation of porcine intestinal brush-border membrane vesicles have been studied and several interesting features of the peroxidation have been elucidated. The addition of dithiothreitol and Fe2+ is far more effective in induction of the lipid peroxidation than any of the other metal ion species tested (Fe3+, Cu2+, Ni2+, Zn2+ and Cr3+). The peroxidation rate of the membrane vesicles induced by dithiothreitol plus Fe2+ was sensitive for the incubation temperature and was increased with increase of the temperature. Imposition of an inward salt concentration gradient on the membrane vesicles preloaded with 300 mM mannitol by addition of 100 mM chloride of K+, Na+, Li+, Rb+, NH4+ or choline to medium produces a very large reduction of the lipid peroxidation induced by dithiothreitol plus Fe2+. The membrane peroxidation is depressed more with the mannitol (300 mM)-preloaded vesicles than with the K2SO4 (100 mM)-preloaded vesicles when they are incubated in medium containing 20-100 mM of K2SO4. Addition of membrane-permeant anions such as SCN- and I-, but not addition of NO3-, to incubation medium has been found to decrease markedly the lipid peroxidation of the mannitol-preloaded vesicles. From these results it is suggested that the lipid peroxidation of the brush-border membranes by addition of dithiothreitol plus Fe2+ is sensitively changed with change in ionic strength.  相似文献   

16.
The redox cycle of 2,5-dimethoxybenzoquinone (2,5-DMBQ) is proposed as a source of reducing equivalent for the regeneration of Fe2+ and H2O2 in brown rot fungal decay of wood. Oxalate has also been proposed to be the physiological iron reductant. We characterized the effect of pH and oxalate on the 2,5-DMBQ-driven Fenton chemistry and on Fe3+ reduction and oxidation. Hydroxyl radical formation was assessed by lipid peroxidation. We found that hydroquinone (2,5-DMHQ) is very stable in the absence of iron at pH 2 to 4, the pH of degraded wood. 2,5-DMHQ readily reduces Fe3+ at a rate constant of 4.5 x 10(3) M(-1)s(-1) at pH 4.0. Fe2+ is also very stable at a low pH. H2O2 generation results from the autoxidation of the semiquinone radical and was observed only when 2,5-DMHQ was incubated with Fe3+. Consistent with this conclusion, lipid peroxidation occurred only in incubation mixtures containing both 2,5-DMHQ and Fe3+. Catalase and hydroxyl radical scavengers were effective inhibitors of lipid peroxidation, whereas superoxide dismutase caused no inhibition. At a low concentration of oxalate (50 micro M), ferric ion reduction and lipid peroxidation are enhanced. Thus, the enhancement of both ferric ion reduction and lipid peroxidation may be due to oxalate increasing the solubility of the ferric ion. Increasing the oxalate concentration such that the oxalate/ferric ion ratio favored formation of the 2:1 and 3:1 complexes resulted in inhibition of iron reduction and lipid peroxidation. Our results confirm that hydroxyl radical formation occurs via the 2,5-DMBQ redox cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Oxidation of ferrous iron during peroxidation of lipid substrates   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Oxidation of Fe2+ in solution was dependent upon medium composition and the presence of lipid. The complete oxidation of Fe2+ in 0.9% saline was markedly accelerated in the presence of phosphate or EDTA and the ferrous oxidation product formed was readily recoverable as Fe2+ by ascorbate reduction. In contrast, in the presence of either brain synaptosomal membranes, phospholipid liposomes, fatty acid micelles or H2O2, less than 50% of the Fe2+ oxidized during an incubation could be recovered as Fe2+ via reduction with ascorbate. In the presence of unsaturated lipid, oxidation of Fe2+ was associated with peroxidation of lipid, as assessed by the uptake of O2 and formation of thiobarbituric acid-reactive products during incubations. Although relatively little Fe2+ oxidation or lipid peroxidation occurred in saline with synaptosomes or linoleic acid micelles during an incubation with Fe2+ alone, significant Fe2+ oxidation and lipid peroxidation occurred in incubations containing a 1:1 ratio of Fe2+ and Fe3+. Extensive Fe2+ oxidation and lipid peroxidation also occurred with Fe2+ alone in saline incubations with either linolenic or arachidonic acid acid micelles or liposomes prepared from dilinoleoylphosphatidylcholine. While a 1:1 ratio of Fe2+ and Fe3+ enhanced thiobarbituric acid-reactive product formation in incubations containing linolenic or arachidonic micelles, it reduced the rate of O2 consumption as compared with Fe2+ alone. The results demonstrate that oxidation of Fe2+ in incubations containing lipid substrates is linked to and accelerated by peroxidation of those substrates. Furthermore, the results suggest that oxidation of Fe2+ in the presence of lipid or H2O2 creates forms of iron which differ from those formed during simple Fe2+ autoxidation.  相似文献   

18.
Low density lipoprotein (LDL) can be oxidatively modified by cultured endothelial cells or by cupric ions, resulting in increased macrophage uptake of the lipoprotein. This process could be relevant to the formation of macrophage-derived foam cells in the early atherosclerotic lesion. The mechanism of endothelial cell modification of LDL is unknown. In the present work we show that incubation of LDL with purified soybean lipoxygenase, in the presence of pure phospholipase A2, can mimic endothelial cell-induced oxidative modification. Typically, incubation with lipoxygenase plus phospholipase A2 caused: 1) generation of about 15 nmol of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances per mg of LDL protein; 2) a 4- to 7-fold increase in the rate of subsequent macrophage degradation of the LDL; 3) a 10-fold decrease in recognition by fibroblasts; 4) a marked increase in electrophoretic mobility in agarose gels; and, 5) disappearance of intact apoprotein B on SDS polyacrylamide gels. Degradation of the enzymatically modified LDL by macrophages was competitively inhibited by endothelial cell-modified LDL and by polyinosinic acid, but only partially suppressed by acetylated LDL. The lipoxygenase plus phospholipase A2-induced modification of LDL is not necessarily identical to endothelial cell modification, but it is a useful model for studying the mechanism of oxidative modification of LDL. This work also represents the first example of oxidative modification of LDL by specific enzymes leading to enhanced recognition by macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
The apoprotein (apoB) of low density lipoprotein (LDL) is reported to be a large polypeptide, and it is proposed that there are two similar-sized subunit proteins in LDL (Smith, Dawson, and Tanford. 1972. J. Biol. Chem. 247: 3376-3381.). When apoB is isolated under conditions that minimize artifactual proteolysis, only a single, large molecular weight protein appears on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in SDS. To investigate the organization of apoB as it exists within native LDL, limited proteolysis with trypsin has been used as a structural probe. Tryptic digestion for 1 hr at pH 7.6 with enzyme-to-protein ratios of 1:100 and 1:5 results in the liberation of approximately 10% and 30% of apoB as smaller, water-soluble peptides. These peptides may be separated from the partially digested but still intact tryptic core (T-core) of the lipoprotein by chromatography on Sephadex G-75. Repeatedly, the 1:5 T-core of native LDL is found to contain a family of polypeptides of 14,000-100,000 molecular weight. Although they have lost significant quantities of apoprotein, these T-cores sustain an appearance of homogeneity, as studied by analytical ultracentrifugation. Their measured molecular weights do not differ appreciably from those of the native LDL, and the carbohydrate content of the 1:5 tryptic T-core of LDL is similar to that of the native LDL. In normolipemic individuals, LDL generally exists in a monodisperse state, but, in different individuals, monodisperse LDL may range in molecular weight from 2.4 to 3.9 x 10(6). Limited tryptic digestions were used to probe the organization of apoB in these different molecular weight LDL. As assayed by SDS-acrylamide gel electrophoresis of the larger polypeptides and fingerprinting of the smaller released peptides, those regions of LDL exposed to trypsin digestion are identical in monodisperse LDL of 2.5 and 3.4 x 10(6) molecular weight. Thus, the different quantities of lipid bound in these various LDL must interact with apoB so that the same regions of the apoprotein are exposed to the action of trypsin in these different molecular weight lipoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
Human low-density lipoproteins (LDL) were isolated from single donors by differential centrifugation between densities of 1.020 and 1.050 g/mL. The LDL were reduced and alkylated in 7 M guanidine hydrochloride, and the lipid was removed by multiple extractions in the cold with a mixture of diethyl ether and ethanol. Sedimentation studies on the resultant human apoprotein B (apoprotein B-PI) at low concentrations in 6.00 M guanidine hydrochloride showed a single sharp boundary with a sedimentation coefficient of 2.15 +/- 0.04 S at 25 degrees C, uncorrected for viscosity or density. Diffusion experiments performed in the same solvent at low speeds in the analytical ultracentrifuge gave a D25 = 0.694 +/- 0.043 Fick. Combining these values with an apparent specific volume of 0.703 mL/g yielded a molecular weight of 387 000, indistinguishable from that obtained by sedimentation equilibrium analysis in 7 M guanidine hydrochloride. Similar values were also obtained by calibrated sedimentation analysis, by Sepharose 2B chromatography in guanidine hydrochloride, and by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Rat very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), isolated from sera of Triton WR1339 treated animals, were used as the source of rat apoprotein B-PIII. The delipidated VLDL were solubilized in sodium dodecyl sulfate, and apoprotein B-PIII was isolated by Sepharose 4B chromatography. With appropriate corrections for density and viscosity, the behavior of rat apoprotein B-PIII was identical, upon analytical ultracentrifugation, in 6 and 7.7 M guanidine hydrochloride, corresponding to sedimentation and diffusion coefficients of 1.47 S and 0.92 Fick, respectively, in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride. These data may be combined to yield a molecular weight of 210 000. Similar values were obtained by calibrated sedimentation analysis, by Sepharose 2B chromatography in guanidine hydrochloride, and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate.  相似文献   

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