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1.
Lipid thermal transition patterns of the very low density lipoproteins in native and variously treated egg yolk plasma and extracted total very low density lipoproteins lipids have been recorded by differential scanning calorimetry in the temperature range 220–300 K, after lowering the freeze endotherm of free water in the sample with ethylene glycol. Three distinguishable patterns of lipid endotherms, designated types 1, 2 and 3 were obtained, respectively, from (i) native very low density lipoproteins in egg yolk plasma, (ii) freeze damaged very low density lipoproteins in gelled egg yolk plasma and (iii) extracted total lipids of very low density lipoproteins dispersed in water. Protein-depleted ‘lipid core’ particles of very low density lipoproteins obtained by exhaustive proteolysis of egg yolk plasma gave type 2 lipid transition pattern suggesting similarities in its lipid association with that of the freeze damaged very low density lipoproteins. Freezing the ‘lipid cores’ of very low density lipoproteins led to phase separation and gave type 3 lipid transition pattern of water-dispersed, phase-separated total very low density lipoprotein lipids. Relative heat uptake of native very low density lipoproteins in egg yolk plasma was about 15% lower than the freeze damaged sample or of the extracted total lipids. Treatments which prevented aggregation and gelation of very low density lipoproteins in egg yolk plasma during frozen storage, namely with additives such as glycerol or NaCl, gave subsequent lipid transition pattern intermediate between type 1 and 2, indicating that while very low density lipoprotein aggregation is prevented, additives do not altogether prevent changes in lipid association in these particles.  相似文献   

2.
1. Plasma lipids and lipoproteins of free-ranging howling monkeys from Costa Rica (Alouatta palliata), aged 5 months to 23 years, were characterized. 2. High density lipoproteins were lipid-rich, similar to HDL2 of human plasma. 3. Fatty acid compositions of major lipid classes of very low, low and high density lipoproteins differed among social groups, possibly due to both dietary and genetic factors. 4. Low and high density lipoprotein phospholipids were enriched in phosphatidylethanolamine. 5. Howler plasma cross reacted with antihuman apoA-I antibodies but not with antihuman LDL antibodies. 6. No dimeric form of apoA-II was present, unlike human apoA-II.  相似文献   

3.
This report describes further studies on the characterization of apolipoprotein D (ApoD), a recently recognized human plasma apolipoprotein, and presents results on the isolation and distribution of its lipoprotein form, lipoprotein D (LP-D). ApoD, isolated by a procedure combining hydroxylapatite and Sephadex G-100 column chromatography, migrated on 7% polyacrylamide gel as a single band with a mobility intermediate between those of A-II and C-II polypeptides. On double diffusion and immunoelectrophoresis, ApoD reacted only with antiserum to ApoD. It was characterized by the presence of all common amino acids including half-cystine. The amino terminal acid was blocked. Carbohydrate analysis demonstrated that ApoD is a glycoprotein with glucose, mannose, galactose, glucosamine, and sialic acid accounting for 18% of the dry weight of ApoD. The estimated molecular weight of ApoD IS 22 100. ApoD occurs in the serum as a lipoprotein which was isolated from high density lipoproteins3 by two different chromatographic procedures. In the first procedure, high density lipoproteins3 were treated with neuraminidase and chromatographed on concanavlin A. The retained fraction containing LP-D was purified by hydroxylapatite column chromatography. Alternatively, LP-D was isolated by a procedure combining chromatography of high density lipoproteins3 or whole serum on an immunosorber containing antibodies to ApoD, and hydroxylapatite column chromatography. LP-D displayed a single, symmetrical boundary in the analytical ultracentrifuge and a single band on 7% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. When injected into rabbits it produced antisera that reacted only with ApoD. On immunoelectrophoresis LP-D had a mobility different from that of lipoprotein A (LP-A). A direct immunological comparison of LP-D and LP-A showed a reaction of nonidentity. LP-D consists of 65-75% protein and 25-35% lipid. The lipid moiety contains cholesterol, cholesterol ester, triglyceride, and phospholipid. The phospholipid. composition is characterized by a relative high content of lysolecithin and sphingomyelin and a relatively low content of lecithin. We have concluded from these studies that ApoD is a unique apolipoprotein that exists in the form of a distinct lipoprotein family with a macromolecular distribution extending from very low density lipoproteins into very high density lipoproteins, but with a maximum concentration in high density lipoproteins3 and a minimum concentration in high density lipoproteins.  相似文献   

4.
1. The plasma lipoproteins of various members of the order Perissodactyla have been examined by electrophoresis and analytical ultracentrifugation. 2. In the Equidae, high density (alpha) lipoprotein was the major component (80-90%) and low density (beta) lipoprotein (10-20%) the minor component. 3. In the Tapiridae represented by the Malayan tapir (Tapirus indicus), high density and low density lipoproteins were present in approximately equal amounts. 4. In the Rhinocerotidae, the high density lipoprotein characteristic of the Equidae and Tapiridae was absent, and the plasma lipoproteins consisted of a complex group having beta mobility on electrophoresis and a flotation pattern usually associated with low density lipoprotein. 5. The fatty acid composition of plasma lipids was remarkably similar in all members of the Perissodactyla examined, with very high percentages of linoleic acid (greater than 70%) being found in the cholesteryl esters.  相似文献   

5.
Immunologic probes have been used to examine the conformation of apolipoprotein B (apo-B) as it exists within native low density lipoprotein (LDL) after lipid displacement with Triton X-100 and after denaturation with guanidine hydrochloride organic solvent delipidation and reconstitution with Triton X-100. Antigenic expression was assayed in two systems: by using either Triton X-100 or bovine serum albumin to maintain protein solubility. Apo-B delipidated by lipid displacement using Triton X-100 was virtually identical to LDL-apo-B in both systems, as assayed by polyclonal antisera prepared in rabbits against either antigen. Thus the native antigenic sites are preserved, although the displacement of the lipid core of LDL drastically alters the physical properties of the particle. Apo-B delipidated by solvent extraction in guanidine was reconstituted with Triton X-100 by several methods, and the products were examined immunologically. One method yielded a product that resembled apo-B as delipidated with Triton X-100, although full reconstitution could not be achieved. Nevertheless, Triton promoted refolding of apo-B to reform partial native structure as judged immunologically. By using both physical and immunologic methods for assessing structure, it is clearly evident that the perceptions of the conformational states of reconstituted apo-B can be very different, and multiple criteria need to be used to assess lipoprotein reconstitution.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of the present study was to identify the protein that accounts for the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP)-inhibitory activity that is specifically associated with human plasma high density lipoproteins (HDL). To this end, human HDL apolipoproteins were fractionated by preparative polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis, and 30 distinct protein fractions with molecular masses ranging from 80 down to 2 kDa were tested for their ability to inhibit CETP activity. One single apolipoprotein fraction was able to completely inhibit CETP activity. The N-terminal sequence of the 6-kDa protein inhibitor matched the N-terminal sequence of human apoC-I, the inhibition was completely blocked by specific anti-apolipoprotein C-I antibodies, and mass spectrometry analysis confirmed the identity of the isolated inhibitor with full-length human apoC-I. Pure apoC-I was able to abolish CETP activity in a concentration-dependent manner and with a high efficiency (IC(50) = 100 nmol/liter). The inhibitory potency of total delipidated HDL apolipoproteins completely disappeared after a treatment with anti-apolipoprotein C-I antibodies, and the apoC-I deprivation of native plasma HDL by immunoaffinity chromatography produced a mean 43% rise in cholesteryl ester transfer rates. The main localization of apoC-I in HDL and not in low density lipoprotein in normolipidemic plasma provides further support for the specific property of HDL in inhibiting CETP activity.  相似文献   

7.
A double antibody radioimmunoassay technique was developed for the measurement of apolipoprotein A-I, the major apoprotein of human high density lipoproteins. Apolipoprotein A-I was prepared from human delipidated high density lipoprotein (d equal to 1.085-1.210) by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. Purified apolipoprotein A-I antibodies were obtained by means of apolipoprotein A-I immunoadsorbent. Apolipoprotein A-I was radiolabeled with 125-I by the iodine monochloride technique. 65-80% of 125 I-labeled apolipoprotein A-I could be bound by the different apolipoprotein A-I antibodies, and more than 95% of the 125-I-labeled apolipoprotein A-I was displaced by unlabeled apolipoprotein A-I. The immunoassay was found to be sensitive for the detection of about 10 ng of apolipoprotein A-I in the incubation mixture, and accurate with a variability of only 3-5% (S.E.M.). This technique enables the quantitation of apolipoprotein A-I in whole plasma or high density lipoprotein without the need of delipidation. The quantitation of apolipoprotein A-I in high density lipoprotein was found similar to that obtained by gel filtration technique. The displacement capacity of the different lipoproteins and apoproteins in comparison to unlabeled apolipoprotein A-I was: very low density lipoprotein, 1.8%; low density lipoprotein, 2.6%; high density lipoprotein, 68%; apolipoprotein B, non-detectable; apolipoprotein C, 0.5%; and apolipoprotein A-II, 4%. The distribution of immunoassayable apolipoprotein A-I among the different plasma lipoproteins was as follows: smaller than 1% in very low density lipoprotein and low density lipoprotein; 50% in high density lipoprotein, and 50% in lipoprotein fraction of density greater than 1.21 g/ml. The amount of apolipoprotein A-I in the latter fraction was found to be related to the number of centrifugations.  相似文献   

8.
The incorporation of labeled acetate into lipids was studied in rat hepatocytes isolated after treatment of liver with collagenase and hyaluronidase. About 60% of the lipid radioactivity was in free cholesterol and 13% was in triglycerides. Acetate incorporation was markedly inhibited when human serum lipoproteins were present in the incubation medium. Very low, high, and low density lipoproteins, at concentrations of 1.0 mg/ml, inhibited acetate incorporation by 70, 55, and 35%, respectively. Chylomicrons, at similar concentrations, did not inhibit acetate incorporation. The distribution of radioactivity into lipid classes was unchanged by the addition of lipoproteins. Lipoproteins did not produce a nonspecific toxic effect on hepatocytes, since their addition did not alter the rate of leucine incorporation into protein. The addition of the delipidated protein from low density lipoprotein or of lecithin in amounts comparable to those present in inhibitory concentrations of lipoproteins failed to diminish acetate incorporation. Artificial cholesterol-lecithin emulsions containing small amounts of free cholesterol did not inhibit lipid synthesis. Although the mechanism for the inhibition of acetate incorporation by lipoproteins is unclear, such effects may play some physiological role in the control of lipid biosynthesis in the liver.  相似文献   

9.
An analysis of plasma lipids and lipoprotein fractions was performed over the course of the annual ovarian cycle of the female turtle, Chrysemys picta. Determinations of total plasma triglycerides, cholesterol, vitellogenin and apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) were made. The lipid and protein composition of the lipoprotein fractions [very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), low density lipoprotein (LDL), high density lipoprotein (HDL) and very high density lipoprotein (VHDL)] were also observed over the same period. Plasma triglyceride and vitellogenin levels were significantly increased in the spring preovulatory period and fall recrudescent phase. Total plasma cholesterol levels were significantly elevated only at the onset of the fall recrudescent phase and apoA-I levels were highest during the postoviposition/ovarian arrest phase. The triglyceride content of VLDL was highest in preovulatory animals and there were apparent seasonal changes in the expression of apoA-I and apoE of HDL/VHDL. We conclude that the coordinate regulation of lipids and protein contributes to seasonal ovarian growth and clearance of lipids from plasma, both of which are most likely under hormonal control.  相似文献   

10.
In contrast to plasma from most other animals, guinea pig plasma causes little or no stimulation of lipoprotein lipase activity. Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) isolated by ultracentrifugation of guinea pig serum caused a definite stimulation of lipase activity, whereas the infranatant inhibited the activity. Gel filtration in 5 M guanidinium hydrochloride of delipidated VLDL demonstrated that the activation was caused by a low molecular weight protein. The VLDL themselves were hydrolized at similar rates as human VLDL both by guinea pig and by bovine lipoprotein lipases. Thus, guinea pig VLDL contain an activator for lipoprotein lipase analogous to that in other animals and there is enough of the activator to support rapid hydrolysis of the VLDL lipids by the lipase.  相似文献   

11.
Incubation of apoprotein A-I (apo-A-I), the major protein component of human high density lipoprotein, with rat liver microsomal membranes under conditions of elevated pH and ionic strength leads to the production of a soluble protein:lipid complex (A-I/MM complex). The A-I/MM complex, as purified by density gradient centrifugation and agarose column chromatography, possesses a lipid composition similar to the hepatic microsomal membrane and a protein/lipid ratio similar to that of plasma high density lipoproteins, but markedly different from that of recombinant particles prepared with synthetic lipids. The A-I/MM complex constitutes a more physiological recombinant particle than can be formed using synthetic lipids and may be a suitable model for the newly assembled intracellular high density lipoproteins. Incubation of the erythrocyte plasma membranes with apo-A-I under the same conditions as used with microsomal membranes fails to generate any lipid:apoprotein complexes. This membrane specificity for forming soluble lipoprotein complexes suggests that the microsomal membranes possess a unique feature, possibly their lipid composition, which render them particularly suitable to serve as lipid donors to the apoproteins which are undergoing assembly within the endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi organelles.  相似文献   

12.
The synthesis and secretion of apoB, the major protein component of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and low density lipoprotein (LDL), were studied using rat hepatocytes maintained in primary culture. Supplementation of hepatocytes with rat serum VLDL and LDL increased the production of apoB while delipidated lipoproteins had no significant effect, suggesting a role for lipids in the production of apoB. Addition of cholesterol to the culture medium also increased the production of apoB in a concentration-dependent manner. Pulse labelling followed by chase in presence of cholesterol indicated enhancement in apoB secretion. Mevinolin which inhibits cholesterol synthesis significantly reduced the secretion of apoB. The presence of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine in the culture medium also increased the secretion of apoB into the medium. These data suggest that availability of lipids, particularly cholesterol, is an important determinant of apoB synthesis and secretion as VLDL.  相似文献   

13.
The activation rate of bovine prothrombin by Factor Xa and Ca2+ has long been known to be greatly enhanced by addition of phospholipid. Upon substitution of human plasma lipoproteins for phospholipid (cephalin) in this activation system, only very low density lipoprotein enhances prothrombin activation. Low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein have no stimulatory effect on prothrombin activation. On the other hand, the sonicated lipid extracts from very low, low, and high density lipoproteins all can substitute for phospholipid in potentiating prothrombin activation. The efficiency of each lipid extract, in this regard, depends upon its source of extraction, and is greatest for the lipid extract of very low density lipoprotein.  相似文献   

14.
Monolayer techniques were used to study the interactions of various lipids (cholesterol, lysophosphatidyl choline, phosphatidal ethanolamine, phosphatidyl choline, sphingomyelin, stearic acid, and lipids extracted from plasma high density lipoproteins and very low density lipoprotein) with the lipid-free protein subunit of rat plasma high density lipoprotein and with rat plasma albumin. The proteins were injected under the lipid monolayer at fixed area, and the increase in surface pressure (decrease in surface tension) was measured as a function of time. With all lipids, both the rate and magnitude of this increase were greater with the apolipoprotein than with albumin. The degree of film penetration of pure lipid films (at an initial film pressure of 15 dynes/cm) by the two proteins followed the same order: cholesterol > phosphatidal ethanolamine > phosphatidyl choline > stearic acid > sphingomyelin > lysophosphatidyl choline. Other variables studied were protein concentration, initial film pressure, and pH. Two distinctive properties of the apolipoprotein were the penetration of lipid films at pressures above the collapse pressure of the protein, and the formation of a film even at low salt concentration. High surface activity and strong interaction of HDL-protein with lipid monolayers may be associated with the flexibility of the protein molecule due to absence of disulfide bridges. The unusual surface activity of HDL-protein may be intimately related to the mechanism of formation of the lipoprotein.  相似文献   

15.
Combined very low and low density lipoproteins were derived from human plasma by polyanion precipitation and the low density lipoprotein fraction (density 1.027–1.050 g/ml) was isolated by sequential ultracentrifugation. When this fraction was applied to Sepharose column chromatography, three lipoproteins were eluted. The first and third peaks were minor components while the second peak represented the bulk of LDL. Further chromatographic and electrophoretic studies indicated that the component representing the second peak was heterogeneous. This component was subsequently delipidated at pH 4 in a quaternary biphasic solvent system. The apoproteins remained soluble after delipidation and were treated with various deaggregating agents. On column isoelectric focusing in the presence of 4 M urea the apoproteins banded as broad overlapping peaks between pH 3 and 7. When hexanol was added to the system, distinct apoprotein subfractions were resolved.  相似文献   

16.
A simple and sensitive method to determine lipoprotein and lipids profiles in micro-liter scale individual serum sample is not presently available. Traditional lipoprotein separation techniques either by ultra-centrifugation or by liquid chromatography methods have their disadvantages in both lipoprotein separation and lipids component quantification. In this study we used small volume needing size-exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography to separate different lipoprotein subclasses in 50μL serum. And lipids contents, such as cholesterol, cholesterol ester and triacylglycerol, were measured by using two different fluorescence-based lipid detection methods. With this method, very low density lipoprotein, low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein could be easily separated, and follow-up lipid detection was completed by simple kinds of reactions. Serum lipoprotein and lipids profiling from C57BL/6 mice (n=5) and human (n=5) were analyzed. The elution profiles of five individuals were highly reproducible, and there were lipoprotein and lipids distribution variations between C57BL/6 mice and human beings. In conclusion, this method which combined small volume needing size-exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography and fluorescence-based lipids measurement, provided a simple, efficient, integrity and reproducible procedure for determining serum lipoprotein and lipids profiles in micro-liter scale levels. It becomes possible that determination of lipoprotein profiles and gaining information of lipids in different lipoproteins can be accomplished simultaneously.  相似文献   

17.
Low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein were isolated from rat serum by sequential ultracentrifugation in the density intervals 1.025-1.050 g/ml and 1.125-1.21 g/ml, respectively. The isolated lipoproteins were radioiodinated using ICl. Low density lipoprotein was further purified by concanavalin A affinity chromatography and concentrated by ultracentrifugation. 95% of the purified low density lipoprotein radioactivity was precipitable by tetramethylurea, while only 4% was associated with lipids. The radioiodinated high density lipoprotein was incubated for 1 h at 4 degrees C with unlabelled very low density lipoprotein, followed by reisolation by sequential ultracentrifugation. Only 3% of the radioactivity was associated with lipids and 90% was present on apolipoprotein A-I. The serum decay curves of labelled and subsequently purified rat low and high density lipoprotein, measured over a period of 28 h, clearly exhibited more than one component, in contrast to the monoexponential decay curves of iodinated human low density lipoprotein. The decay curves were not affected by the methods used to purify the LDL and HDL preparations. The catabolic sites of the labelled rat lipoproteins were analyzed in vivo using leupeptin-treated rats. In vivo treatment of rats with leupeptin did not affect the rate of disappearance from serum of intravenously injected labelled rat low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein. Leupeptin-dependent accumulation of radioiodine occurred almost exclusively in the liver after intravenous injection of iodinated low density lipoprotein, while both the liver and the kidneys showed leupeptin-dependent accumulation of radioactivity after injection of iodinated high density lipoprotein.  相似文献   

18.
Apolipoprotein (apo) A-I, the major apoprotein of human high density lipoprotein, is a vital cofactor for lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), the plasma enzyme responsible for esterification of free cholesterol associated with high density lipoprotein. This esterification is an important component of the reverse cholesterol transport process. An immunochemical approach was used to test the hypothesis that a discrete region of apoA-I was important for LCAT activation. Three human apoA-I-specific monoclonal antibodies were found to inhibit LCAT activation in vitro in a manner directly proportional to their ability to bind to apoA-I-proteoliposomes in fluid phase immunoassays. This relationship was not observed with another four apoA-I-specific antibodies that also were able to bind to the apoA-I proteoliposomes. The use of synthetic peptides representing short amino acid sequences of the apoA-I molecule facilitated the identification of discrete but overlapping apoA-I epitopes for those antibodies that interfered with LCAT-mediated cholesterol esterification. These epitopes spanned amino acid residues 95-121 of mature apoA-I. Therefore, this region is most likely involved in the activation of LCAT by apoA-I.  相似文献   

19.
Several intraerythrocytic growth cycles of Plasmodium falciparum could be achieved in vitro using a serum free medium supplemented only with a human high density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction (d = 1.063-1.210). The parasitemia obtained was similar to that in standard culture medium containing human serum. The parasite development was incomplete with the low density lipoprotein (LDL) fraction and did not occur with the VLDL fraction. The lipid traffic from HDL to the infected erythrocytes was demonstrated by pulse labeling experiments using HDL loaded with either fluorescent NBD-phosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC) or radioactive [3H]palmitoyl-PC. At 37 degrees C, the lipid probes rapidly accumulated in the infected cells. After incubation in HDL medium containing labeled PC, a subsequent incubation in medium with either an excess of native HDL or 20% human serum induced the disappearance of the label from the erythrocyte plasma membrane but not from the intraerythrocytic parasite. Internalization of lipids did not occur at 4 degrees C. The mechanism involved a unidirectional flux of lipids but no endocytosis. The absence of labeling of P. falciparum, with HDL previously [125I]iodinated on their apolipoproteins or with antibodies against the apolipoproteins AI and AII by immunofluorescence and immunoblotting, confirmed that no endocytosis of the HDL was involved. A possible pathway of lipid transport could be a membrane flux since fluorescence videomicroscopy showed numerous organelles labeled with NBD-PC moving between the erythrocyte and the parasitophorous membranes. TLC analysis showed that a partial conversion of the PC to phosphatidylethanolamine was observed in P. falciparum-infected red cells after pulse with [3H]palmitoyl-PC-HDL. The intensity of the lipid traffic was stage dependent with a maximum at the trophozoite and young schizont stages (38th h of the erythrocyte life cycle). We conclude that the HDL fraction appears to be a major lipid source for Plasmodium growth.  相似文献   

20.
Incubation of low (LDL), intermediate (IDL), or very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) with palmitic acid and either high density lipoproteins (HDL), delipidated HDL, or purified apolipoprotein (apo) A-I resulted in the formation of lipoprotein particles with discoidal structure and mean particle diameters ranging from 146 to 254 A by electron microscopy. Discs produced from IDL or LDL averaged 26% protein, 42% phospholipid, 5% cholesteryl esters, 24% free cholesterol, and 3% triglycerides; preparations derived from VLDL contained up to 21% triglycerides. ApoA-I was the predominant protein present, with smaller amounts of apoA-II. Crosslinking studies of discs derived from LDL or IDL indicated the presence of four apoA-I molecules per particle, while those derived from large VLDL varied more in size and contained as many as six apoA-I molecules per particle. Incubation of discs derived from IDL or LDL with purified lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), albumin, and a source of free cholesterol produced core-containing particles with size and composition similar to HDL2b. VLDL-derived discs behaved similarly, although the HDL products were somewhat larger and more variable in size. When discs were incubated with plasma d greater than 1.21 g/ml fraction rather than LCAT, core-containing particles in the size range of normal HDL2a and HDL3a were also produced. A variety of other purified free fatty acids were shown to promote disc formation. In addition, some mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids facilitated the formation of smaller, spherical particles in the size range of HDL3c. Both discoidal and small spherical apoA-I-containing lipoproteins were generated when native VLDL was incubated with lipoprotein lipase in the presence of delipidated HDL. We conclude that lipolysis product-mediated dissociation of lipid-apoA-I complexes from VLDL, IDL, or LDL may be a mechanism for formation of HDL subclasses during lipolysis, and that the availability of different lipids may influence the type of HDL-precursors formed by this mechanism.  相似文献   

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