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1.
The binding of human intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL) to HepG2 cells was studied. We found that human 125I-IDL interact with a binding site of high-affinity (Kd 0.74 micrograms/ml, Bmax 0.049 micrograms/mg cell protein) and a binding site of lower affinity (Kd 86.8 micrograms/ml; Bmax 0.53 micrograms/mg cell protein). The high-affinity binding sites show characteristics of LDL-receptors since they interact with IDL and low-density lipoproteins (LDL) and are calcium dependent. The low-affinity binding sites are calcium-independent and interact with IDL, LDL, high density lipoproteins-3 (HDL3), apolipoprotein (apo) E-liposomes, apoCs-liposomes, apoA-I-liposomes but not with liposomes containing albumin or erythrocyte membrane proteins. Therefore, HepG2 cells have on their surface a binding site that resembles or is identical to the lipoprotein binding site (LBS) that we found on rat liver membranes (Brissette and No?l (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 6847-6852). Internalization, degradation and cholesterol ester selective uptake were determined in the presence or in the absence of a sufficient amount of human HDL3 to abolish the interaction of IDL to the LBS in order to obtain information on the function of this site. Our results suggest that the LBS participates in the internalization of IDL but not in their degradation and that it is responsible for the selective uptake of cholesterol esters of IDL.  相似文献   

2.
Upon incubation with rat liver membranes, radioiodinated rat intermediate density lipoproteins (IDL) interacted with at least two binding sites having a low and a high affinity as demonstrated by the curvilinear Scatchard plots obtained from the specific binding data. The purpose of our work was to identify the nature of these binding sites. Human low density lipoproteins (LDL), contain apolipoprotein B only, and human high density lipoproteins (HDL3), containing neither apolipoprotein B nor E, were both capable of decreasing the specific binding of rat 125I-IDL. The Scatchard analysis clearly revealed that only the low affinity component was affected by the addition of these human lipoproteins. In fact, the low affinity binding component gradually decreased as the amount of human LDL or HDL3 increased in the binding assay. At a 200-fold excess of human LDL or HDL3, the low affinity binding was totally masked, and the Scatchard plot of the specific 125I-IDL binding became linear. Only the high affinity binding component was left, enabling a precise measurement of its binding parameters. In a series of competitive displacement experiments in which the binding assay contained a 200-fold excess of human LDL or HDL3, only unlabeled rat IDL effectively displaced the binding of rat 125I-IDL. We conclude that the low affinity binding of rat IDL to rat liver membranes is due to weak interactions with unspecified lipoprotein binding sites. The camouflage of these sites by human lipoproteins makes possible the study of IDL binding to the high affinity component which likely represents the combined effect of IDL binding to both the remnant and the LDL receptors.  相似文献   

3.
We assessed the metabolism of low density lipoprotein (LDL) of human monocyte-derived macrophages under hypoxia. The specific binding and association of 125I-labeled LDL (125I-LDL) were not changed under hypoxia compared to normoxia. However, the degradation of 125I-LDL under hypoxia decreased to 60%. The rate of cholesterol esterification under hypoxia was 2-fold greater on incubation with LDL or 25-hydroxycholesterol. The cellular cholesteryl ester content was also greater under hypoxia on incubation with LDL. Secretion of apolipoprotein E into the medium was not altered under hypoxia, suggesting that apolipoprotein E independent cholesterol efflux may be reduced under hypoxia. Thus, hypoxia affects the intracellular metabolism of LDL, stimulates cholesterol esterification, and enhances cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages. Hypoxia is one of the important factors modifying the cellular lipid metabolism in arterial wall.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of exogenous apo E-3 and of cholesterol-enriched meals on the binding, cell association and proteolytic degradation of human chylomicrons and their remnants were determined in cultured human skin fibroblasts. Chylomicrons were prepared from plasma of normolipemic humans 4 h after a fat meal with normal or high cholesterol content. Remnants were obtained after incubation of chylomicrons with lipoprotein lipase in vitro. Cellular metabolism of chylomicrons was minimal, less than 10% that of LDL. Exogenous apo E-2 enhanced chylomicron metabolism by 3-4-fold. The cellular metabolism of remnants was 2.5-3.5-fold higher as compared to intact chylomicrons but their response to exogenous apo E-3 was considerably lower. The cellular metabolism of chylomicrons and chylomicron remnants obtained from subjects eating cholesterol-enriched fat meal was the highest either without or with added exogenous apo E-3. Yet, even in the preparation that exhibits the highest metabolic activity (apo E-3 enriched remnants from cholesterol-enriched meals) the absolute proteolytic degradation was about two-thirds that of LDL. We conclude that although LDL-receptors take up and degrade chylomicron remnants, the rate of catabolism of remnants by this route can not explain the rapid and complete remnant removal process as observed in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
B E Bihain  F T Yen 《Biochemistry》1992,31(19):4628-4636
This paper describes a mechanism for degradation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in fibroblasts unable to synthesize the LDL receptor. In this cell line, long-chain free fatty acids (FFA) activated 125I-LDL uptake; unsaturated FFA were the most efficient. The first step of this pathway was the binding of LDL apoB to a single class of sites on the plasma membrane and was reversible in the presence of greater than or equal to 10 mM suramin. Binding equilibrium was achieved after a 60-90-min incubation at 37 degrees C with 1 mM oleate; under these conditions, the apparent Kd for 125I-LDL binding was 12.3 micrograms/mL. Both cholesterol-rich (LDL and beta-VLDL) and triglyceride-rich (VLDL) lipoproteins, but not apoE-free HDL, efficiently competed with 125I-LDL for this FFA-induced binding site. After LDL bound to the cell surface, they were internalized and delivered to lysosomes; chloroquine inhibited subsequent proteolysis of LDL and thereby increased the cellular content of the particles. A physiological oleate to albumin molar ratio, i.e., 1:1 (25 microM oleate and 2 mg/mL albumin), was sufficient to significantly (p less than 0.01) activate all three steps of this alternate pathway: for example, 644 +/- 217 (25 microM oleate) versus 33 +/- 57 (no oleate) ng of LDL/mg of cell protein was degraded after incubation (2 h, 37 degrees C) with 50 micrograms/mL 125I-LDL. We speculate that this pathway could contribute to the clearance of both chylomicron remnants and LDL.  相似文献   

6.
Apo E5(Glu3----Lys) is a naturally occurring apolipoprotein E (apo E) mutant found in patients with hyperlipoproteinemia and atherosclerosis. It has been shown to have a high affinity for low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors. In this study, mutant apo E5 was produced by Chinese hamster ovary cells by means of an in vitro site-directed mutagenesis technique, and its LDL receptor binding activity was assessed. The apo E5 obtained from gene expression bound more readily to the LDL receptor than did plasma apo E3. The concentrations required for 50% competitive binding of 125I-labeled LDL to the LDL receptors were 58.9 ng/ml for plasma apo E3 and 25.7 ng/ml for the expressed apo E5. The expressed apo E5 displayed 229% normal binding. This result is highly consistent with that obtained with plasma apo E5, which showed 217% normal binding. Although the experimental apo E isoproteins contained more sialic acid than plasma apo E, the extent of sialylation had no effect on the receptor binding of apo E.  相似文献   

7.
Freshly prepared plasma membranes from rat corpora lutea were examined for the presence of low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptors by determining the specific binding of 125I-LDL and 125I-HDL. These membranes have two types of binding site for 125I-LDL, one with high affinity (Kd = 7.7 micrograms of LDL protein/ml), the other with low affinity (Kd = 213 micrograms of LDL protein/ml) and one type of binding site for 125I-HDL with Kd = 17.8 micrograms of HDL protein/ml. LDL receptor is sensitive to pronase and trypsin; HDL receptor, however, is resistant. The binding reaction was further characterized with respect to effect of time and temperature of incubation, requirement of divalent metal ion, influence of ionic strength, and binding specificity. In vivo pretreatment of rats with human choriogonadotropin (hCG) resulted in induction of both LDL and HDL receptors in a dose- and time-dependent manner when compared with saline-injected controls. The induction of lipoprotein receptors by hCG treatment is target organ-specific since the increase was seen only in the ovarian tissue. Membranes prepared from liver, kidney, and heart did not show an increase in lipoprotein receptors after hCG injection. An examination of the equilibrium dissociation constants for 125I-LDL and 125I-HDL binding after hCG administration revealed that the increase in binding activity was due to an increase in the number of binding sites rather than to a change in the binding affinity. In conclusion, rat corpus luteum possesses specific receptors for both LDL and HDL and these receptors are regulated by gonadotropins.  相似文献   

8.
The sulfated glycosaminoglycan, heparin, was found to release 125I-labeled low density lipoprotein (125I-LDL) from its receptor site on the surface of normal human fibroblasts. Measurement of the amount of 125I-LDL released by heparin permitted the resolution of the total cellular uptake of 125I-LDL at 37 degrees C into two components: first, an initial rapid, high affinity binding of the lipoprotein to the surface receptor, from which the 125I-LDL could be released by heparin, and second, a slower process attributable to an endocytosis of the receptor-bound lipoprotein, which rendered it resistant to heparin release. At 4 degrees C the amount of heparin-releasable 125I-LDL was similar to that at 37 degrees C, but interiorization of the lipoprotein did not occur at the lower temperature. The physiologic importance of the cell surface LDL receptor was emphasized by the finding that mutant fibroblasts from a subject with homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia, which lack the ability to take up 125I-LDL at 37 degrees C, did not show cell surface binding of 125I-LDL, as measured by heparin release, at either 4 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Although heparin released 125I-LDL from its binding site, it did not release 3H-concanavalin A from its surface receptor, and conversely, alpha-methyl-D-mannopyranoside, which released 3H-concanavalin A, did not release surface-bound 125I-LDL. When added to the culture medium simultaneously with LDL, heparin prevented the binding of LDL to its receptor and hence prevented the LDL-mediated suppression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity. The uptake of LDL by fibroblasts is proposed as a model of receptor-mediated adsorptive endocytosis of macromolecules in human cells.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the role of apolipoprotein E (apo E) secreted by peripheral tissues in local lipoprotein metabolism, we developed a cell strain that constitutively produced and secreted apo E. A fusion plasmid containing rat apo E genomic DNA under control of mouse metallothionein promotor was constructed and transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells. A stable transformant designated CHO-MAEII constitutively secreted rat apo E mainly in the form of sialylated free protein. The secretion was further enhanced by metal induction up to 1 micrograms apo E/ml per 12 h. When incubated with 125I-labeled very low density lipoprotein (125I-VLDL) at 37 degrees C, CHO-MAEII took up and degraded 125I-VLDL with higher affinity than control cells. Furthermore, considerable amount of methylated 125I-VLDL was degraded by CHO-MAEII, while no methylated 125I-VLDL was degraded by control cells. No significant differences were found in the uptake of 125I-LDL. The data indicated that apo E molecules secreted by CHO-MAEII were transferred to 125-VLDL particles, which caused a higher affinity of these particles for LDL receptors on the cells. It is suggested that apo E secreted from peripheral tissues enhances the uptake of lipoproteins by themselves or by surrounding cells in the local environment which demand cholesterol and express LDL receptors. CHO-MAEII was a good model for these 'auto- or paracrine-like functions' of apo E.  相似文献   

10.
The relationships of plasma lipid and apolipoprotein (apo) concentrations to hepatic low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity were examined in 21 subjects (16 females, 5 males), who were undergoing laparotomy for non-neoplastic disease (cholecystectomy in 16). None had familial hypercholesterolemia, or renal, endocrine or hepatic disease. Ages were 37-77 years (mean, 58 years), plasma cholesterol concentrations 4.09-6.72 mmol/l (5.38) and plasma triacylglycerol concentrations 0.75-2.35 mmol/l (1.36). Receptor activity was quantified in vitro as the total saturable binding and EDTA-suppressible binding (representing apoB,E receptors) of 125I-labelled human LDL (15 micrograms protein/ml) by liver homogenate at 37 degrees C. There were no significant differences between men and women in 125I-labeled LDL binding. In the pooled data, EDTA-suppressible binding averaged 50 ng 125I-LDL protein/mg cell protein (S.D., 15). Total saturable binding averaged 2-fold greater (mean, 101 ng/mg; S.D., 32). Plasma cholesterol, LDL cholesterol and apoB concentrations were negative functions of both EDTA-suppressible binding and total saturable binding, but the correlations with EDTA-suppressible binding were stronger (cholesterol: r = -0.59, P less than 0.01; LDL cholesterol: r = -0.48, P less than 0.05; apoB: r = -0.61, P less than 0.01). Plasma triacylglycerol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and apoA-I concentrations were not related to either measure of receptor activity. These results provide evidence that the activity of apoB,E receptors in the liver is a major determinant of the plasma LDL concentration in middle-aged and elderly humans.  相似文献   

11.
125I-labeled low density lipoprotein (LDL) binding to purified plasma membranes prepared from freshly isolated human adipocytes was saturable, specific, and displaceable by unlabeled ligand. The maximum specific binding capacity measured at saturating concentrations of 125I-LDL was 1.95 +/- 1.17 micrograms of LDL bound/mg of membrane protein (mean +/- S.D., n = 16). In contrast to cultured fibroblasts, specific binding of LDL to adipocyte membranes was calcium-independent, was not affected by EDTA or NaCl, and was not destroyed by pronase. Plasma membranes purified directly from homogenized adipose tissue also showed calcium-independent LDL specific binding (0.58 +/- 0.33 micrograms of LDL bound/mg of membrane protein, mean +/- S.D. n = 11). Specific binding, internalization, and degradation of 125I-methylated LDL was demonstrated in isolated adipocytes and competition experiments showed that native and methylated LDL interacted with adipocytes through some common recognition mechanism(s). Compared to native LDL, specific binding of methylated LDL to adipocyte membranes was significantly reduced (43%), indicating that interaction of LDL with adipocyte was dependent in part on the lysine residues of apolipoprotein B. LDL binding to adipocyte plasma membranes was also competitively inhibited by human high density lipoprotein subfractions HDL2 and HDL3. Thus, LDL metabolism in mature adipocytes appears to be regulated by mechanisms distinctly different from a variety of cultured mesenchymal cells. In addition, the ability of adipocytes to bind, internalize, and degrade significant amounts of methylated LDL supports the view that adipose tissue is involved in the metabolism of modified lipoproteins in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Stimulation of LDL receptor activity in Hep-G2 cells by a serum factor(s)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The regulation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity in the human hepatoma cell line Hep-G2 by serum components was examined. Incubation of dense monolayers of Hep-G2 cells with fresh medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FM) produced a time-dependent increase in LDL receptor activity. Uptake and degradation of 125I-LDL was stimulated two- to four-fold, as compared with that of Hep-G2 cells cultured in the same media in which they had been grown to confluence (CM); the maximal 125I-LDL uptake plus degradation increased from 0.2 microgram/mg cell protein/4 h to 0.8 microgram/mg cell protein/4 h. In addition, a two-fold increase in cell surface binding of 125I-LDL to Hep-G2 cells was observed when binding was measured at 4 degrees C. There was no change in the "apparent" Kd. The stimulation of LDL receptor activity was suppressed in a concentration-dependent manner by the addition of cholesterol, as LDL, to the cell medium. In contrast to the stimulation of LDL receptor activity, FM did not affect the uptake or degradation of 125I-asialoorosomucoid. Addition of FM increased the protein content per dish, and DNA synthesis was stimulated approximately five-fold, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA; however, the cell number did not change. Cellular cholesterol biosynthesis was also stimulated by FM; [14C]acetate incorporation into unesterified and esterified cholesterol was increased approximately five-fold. Incubation of Hep-G2 cells with high-density lipoproteins (200 micrograms protein/ml) or albumin (8.0 mg/ml) in the absence of the serum factor did not significantly increase the total processed 125I-LDL. Stimulation of LDL receptor activity was dependent on a heat-stable, nondialyzable serum component that eluted in the inclusion volume of a Sephadex G-75 column. Uptake of 125I-LDL by confluent monolayers of human skin fibroblasts was not changed by incubation with FM or by incubation with Hep-G2 conditioned medium. Taken together, these data demonstrate that LDL receptor activity in Hep-G2 cells is stimulated by a serum component. Furthermore, this serum factor shows some specificity for the LDL receptor pathway in liver-derived Hep-G2 cells.  相似文献   

13.
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl esters are taken up by fibroblasts via HDL particle uptake and via selective uptake, i.e., cholesteryl ester uptake independent of HDL particle uptake. In the present study we investigated HDL selective uptake and HDL particle uptake by J774 macrophages. HDL3 (d = 1.125-1.21 g/ml) was labeled with intracellularly trapped tracers: 125I-labeled N-methyltyramine-cellobiose-apo A-I (125I-NMTC-apo A-I) to trace apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) and [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether to trace cholesteryl esters. J774 macrophages, incubated at 37 degrees C in medium containing doubly labeled HDL3, took up 125I-NMTC-apo A-I, indicating HDL3 particle uptake (102.7 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h at 20 micrograms/ml HDL3 protein). Apparent HDL3 uptake according to the uptake of [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether (470.4 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h at 20 micrograms/ml HDL3 protein) was in significant excess on 125I-NMTC-apo A-I uptake, i.e., J774 macrophages demonstrated selective uptake of HDL3 cholesteryl esters. To investigate regulation of HDL3 uptake, cell cholesterol was modified by preincubation with low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or acetylated LDL (acetyl-LDL). Afterwards, uptake of doubly labeled HDL3, LDL (apo B,E) receptor activity or cholesterol mass were determined. Preincubation with LDL or acetyl-LDL increased cell cholesterol up to approx. 3.5-fold over basal levels. Increased cell cholesterol had no effect on HDL3 particle uptake. In contrast, LDL- and acetyl-LDL-loading decreased selective uptake (apparent uptake 606 vs. 366 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h in unloaded versus acetyl-LDL-loaded cells at 20 micrograms HDL3 protein/ml). In parallel with decreased selective uptake, specific 125I-LDL degradation was down-regulated. Using heparin as well as excess unlabeled LDL, it was shown that HDL3 uptake is independent of LDL (apo B,E) receptors. In summary, J774 macrophages take up HDL3 particles. In addition, J774 cells also selectively take up HDL3-associated cholesteryl esters. HDL3 selective uptake, but not HDL3 particle uptake, can be regulated.  相似文献   

14.
Comparative studies were made of the metabolism of plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL) and low density lipoprotein (LDL) by cultured normal human fibroblasts. On a molar basis, the surface binding of (125)I-HDL was only slightly less than that of (125)I-LDL, whereas the rates of internalization and degradation of (125)I-HDL were very low relative to those of (125)I-LDL. The relationships of internalization and degradation to binding suggested the presence of a saturable uptake mechanism for LDL functionally related to high-affinity binding. This was confirmed by the finding that the total uptake of (125)I-LDL (internalized plus degraded) at 5 micro g LDL protein/ml was 100-fold greater than that attributable to fluid or bulk pinocytosis, quantified with [(14)C]sucrose, and 10-fold greater than that attributable to the sum of fluid endocytosis and adsorptive endocytosis. In contrast, (125)I-HDL uptake could be almost completely accounted for by the uptake of medium during pinocytosis and by invagination of surface membrane (bearing bound lipoprotein) during pinocytosis. These findings imply that, at most, only a small fraction of bound HDL binds to the high-affinity LDL receptor and/or that HDL binding there is internalized very slowly. The rate of (125)I-HDL degradation by cultured fibroblasts (per unit cell mass) exceeded an estimate of the turnover rate of HDL in vivo, suggesting that peripheral tissues may contribute to HDL catabolism. In accordance with their differing rates of uptake and cholesterol content, LDL increased the cholesterol content of fibroblasts and selectively inhibited sterol biosynthesis, whereas HDL had neither effect.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: Apolipoprotein (apo) E is likely involved in redistributing cholesterol and phospholipids during compensatory synaptogenesis in the injured CNS. Three common isoforms of apoE exist in human (E2, E3, and E4). The apoE4 allele frequency is markedly increased in both late-onset sporadic and familial Alzheimer's disease (AD). ApoE concentration in the brain of AD subjects follows a gradient: ApoE levels decrease as a function of E2 > E3 ? E4. It has been proposed that the poor reinnervation capacity reported in AD may be caused by impairment of the apoE/low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor activity. To understand further the role of this particular axis in lipid homeostasis in the CNS, we have characterized binding, internalization, and degradation of human 125I-LDL to primary cultures of rat astrocytes. Specific binding was saturable, with a KD of 1.8 nM and a Bmax of 0.14 pmol/mg of proteins. Excess unlabeled human LDL or very LDL (VLDL) displaced 70% of total binding. Studies at 37°C confirmed that astrocytes bind, internalize, and degrade 125I-LDL by a specific, saturable mechanism. Reconstituted apoE (E2, E3, and E4)-liposomes were labeled with 125I and incubated with primary cultures of rat astrocytes and hippocampal neurons to examine specific binding. Human LDL and VLDL displaced binding and internalization of all apoE isoforms similarly in both astrocytes and neurons. 125I-ApoE2 binding was significantly lower than that of the other 125I-apoE isoforms in both cell types. 125I-ApoE4 binding was similar to that of 125I-apoE3 in both astrocytes and neurons. On the other hand, 125I-apoE3 binding was significantly higher in neurons than in astrocytes. These isoform-specific alterations in apoE-lipoprotein pathway could explain some of the differences reported in the pathophysiology of AD subjects carrying different apoE alleles.  相似文献   

16.
To study the interaction between low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and granules from rat serosal mast cells in vitro, mast cells were stimulated with the degranulating agent 48/80 to induce exocytosis of the secretory granules. Subsequent incubation of the exocytosed granules with 125I-LDL resulted in binding of the labelled LDL to the granules. When increasing amounts of agent 48/80 were added to mast-cell suspensions, a dose-dependent release of granules was observed and a parallel increase in the amount of 125I-LDL bound to granules resulted. 125I-LDL bound to a single class of high-affinity binding sites on the granules. At saturation, 105 ng of LDL were bound per microgram of granule protein. The lipoprotein binding to mast-cell granules was apolipoprotein(apo)-B + E-specific. Thus 125I-LDL binding to the granules was effectively compared for by LDL (apo-B) or by dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing apo-E, but not by high-density lipoprotein (HDL3) containing apo-AI as their major protein component. Neutralization by acetylation of the positively charged amino groups of apo-B of LDL or presence of a high ionic strength in the incubation medium prevented LDL from binding to the granules, indicating the presence of ionic interactions between the positively charged amino acids of LDL and negatively charged groups of the granules. It could be demonstrated that LDL bound to the negatively charged heparin proteoglycan of the granules. Thus treatment of granules with heparinase resulted in loss of their ability to bind LDL, and substances known to bind to heparin, such as Toluidine Blue, avidin, lipoprotein lipase, fibronectin and protamine, all effectively competed with LDL for binding to the granules. The results show that LDL is efficiently bound to the heparin proteoglycan component of mast-cell granules once the mast cells are stimulated to release their granules into the extracellular space.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of apolipoprotein (apo) E genotype on apoB-100 metabolism was examined in three normolipidemic apoE2/E2, five type III hyperlipidemic apoE2/E2, and five hyperlipidemic apoE3/E2 subjects using simultaneous administration of 131I-VLDL and 125I-LDL, and multi-compartmental modeling. Compared with normolipidemic apoE2/E2 subjects, type III hyperlipidemic E2/E2 subjects had increased plasma and VLDL cholesterol, plasma and VLDL triglycerides, and VLDL and intermediate density lipoprotein (IDL) apoB concentrations (P < 0.05). These abnormalities were chiefly a consequence of decreased VLDL and IDL apoB fractional catabolic rate (FCR). Compared with hyperlipidemic E3/E2 subjects, type III hyperlipidemic E2/E2 subjects had increased IDL apoB concentration and decreased conversion of IDL to LDL particles (P < 0.05). In a pooled analysis, VLDL cholesterol was positively associated with VLDL and IDL apoB concentrations and the proportion of VLDL apoB in the slowly turning over VLDL pool, and was negatively associated with VLDL apoB FCR after adjusting for subject group. VLDL triglyceride was positively associated with VLDL apoB concentration and VLDL and IDL apoB production rates after adjusting for subject group. A defective apoE contributes to altered lipoprotein metabolism but is not sufficient to cause overt hyperlipidemia. Additional genetic mutations and environmental factors, including insulin resistance and obesity, may contribute to the development of type III hyperlipidemia.  相似文献   

18.
Using thrombin and trypsin as probes, we determined: first, that low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor binding determinants switch from apolipoprotein (apo) E to apo-B within the very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) Sf 20-60 region of the metabolic cascade from VLDL1 (Sf 100-400) of hypertriglyceridemic (HTG) human subjects to LDL. Second, two different conformations of apo-E exist in HTG-VLDL Sf greater than 60, one accessible (greater than or equal to 1 mol/mol of particle) and one inaccessible (1-2 mol/mol) to both thrombin and the LDL receptor; normal VLDL (Sf greater than 60) have only the inaccessible conformation and therefore do not bind to the LDL receptor. Third, thrombin degrades apo-B into large fragments, three of which have electrophoretic mobilities similar to B-48, B-74, and B-26; this, however, has no effect on apo-B-mediated receptor binding. Fibroblast studies showed that thrombin could abolish receptor uptake of HTG-VLDL1 and HTG-VLDL2 (Sf 60-100), had little or no effect on HTG-VLDL3 (Sf 20-60), and no effect on uptake of intermediate-density lipoprotein (IDL) or LDL. Trypsin abolished the binding of HTG-VLDL1 and HTG-VLDL2, reduced that of HTG-VLDL3, but had little to no effect on IDL or LDL binding. Immunochemical techniques revealed that thrombin cleaved some apo-E into the E-22 and E-12 fragments; after trypsin treatment no apo-E was detected in any HTG-lipoprotein. Normal VLDL subclasses contained less apo-E than the corresponding HTG-VLDL subclasses and it was not cleaved by thrombin. Apo-B immunoreactivities of VLDL subclasses were not significantly changed after treatment with thrombin, although thrombin cleaved some of the B-100 of each VLDL subclass, and all apo-B in IDL and LDL, into 4-6 major large fragments. Trypsin converted all of the apo-B of each lipoprotein into smaller fragments (Mr less than 100,000). We conclude that apo-E of the thrombin-accessible conformation mediates uptake of HTG-VLDL1 and HTG-VLDL2 but that apo-B alone is sufficient to mediate receptor binding of IDL and LDL; the switch from apo-E to apo-B as the primary or sufficient binding determinant occurs within the VLDL3 (Sf 20-60) region of the metabolic cascade, where receptor binding first appears in VLDL subclasses from normal subjects.  相似文献   

19.
The metabolism of low density lipoproteins (LDL), and LDL modified by reductive methylation (M-LDL) of lysine residues, was studied in proximal tubular (PT) cells both from normal human kidney and from urine of patients with homozygous (LDL receptor-negative) familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). LDL and M-LDL was labeled either in the protein moiety with 125I or in the lactosylceramide moiety with 3H. The binding and degradation of 125I-LDL in normal cells was saturable and displaced by unlabeled LDL but not by M-LDL. The uptake of [3H]lactosylceramide (LacCer) low density lipoprotein in normal renal cells was saturable, and time and temperature-dependent. Exogenously derived [3H]LacCer on LDL was rapidly taken up and catabolized to monoglycosylceramide, or it was utilized for the endogenous synthesis of globotriaosylceramide (trihexosylceramide) and globotetraosylceramide (tetraglycosylceramide). [3H]LacCer M-LDL was taken up less avidly and metabolized less extensively than [3H]LacCer-LDL in normal cells. In homozygous FH renal cells the binding of 125I-LDL was not saturable and not displaced by unlabeled LDL. 125I-LDL degradation did not occur in FH cells. The homozygous FH PT cells took up a 2-fold greater amount of exogenously derived [3H]LacCer on LDL than normal cells. Yet, most of the [3H]LacCer taken up by FH PT cells accumulated as LacCer, and only small amounts were metabolized to monoglycosylceramide, globotriaosylceramide (trihexosylceramide), or globotetraosylceramide (tetraglycosylceramide). When normal and FH PT cells were preincubated with LDL (0-100 micrograms/ml medium), there was a 5-fold increase in cellular LacCer levels in FH cells at saturating levels of LDL, whereas there was about a 50% decrease in LacCer levels in normal cells. While the high affinity binding of LDL was not essential for the delivery of LacCer to cells, the data support the conclusion that LDL binding to the LDL receptor facilitates further LacCer processing and metabolism in normal renal cells. We speculate that [3H] LacCer is taken up by FH homozygous cells via a LDL receptor-independent mechanism and accumulates in the cells without significant metabolism. LacCer taken up by this mechanism contributes to the storage of LacCer in FH PT cells.  相似文献   

20.
Rat serum phosphorylcholine binding protein (PCBP) is characterized by its Ca2+ dependent property to bind phosphorylcholine ligand. PCBP immobilized on sepharose has been shown to selectively bind human plasma apo B and E containing lipoproteins. The present report describes an inhibitory effect of PCBP on the binding of human 125I-LDL to LDL receptors on estradiol treated rat liver membranes. Pre-incubation of liver membranes with PCBP did not affect the binding of 125I-LDL to the membranes. Gel filtration analysis of the incubation products from the LDL-receptor assay showed a concentration dependent binding of 125I-PCBP to LDL. The inhibitory effect of PCBP is likely due to the formation of LDL-PCBP complex and not due to the binding of PCBP to the LDL receptor site.  相似文献   

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