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1.
Platelet-activating factor (PAF, 1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) is a biologically active phospholipid synthesized by a variety of cell types upon appropriate stimulation. PAF is a potent hypotensive factor and it activates platelets and inflammatory cells at concentrations as low as 10(-10) M. Removal of the acetyl moiety at the sn-2 position abolishes the biological activity and this reaction is catalyzed by a specific acetylhydrolase present in plasma and animal tissues. Ultracentrifugation in density gradients showed that 30% of the activity is associated with high density lipoproteins and 70% with low density lipoproteins. We have purified the plasma low density lipoprotein-associated activity to near homogeneity using a rapid assay based on the separation of [3H]acetate from 1-O-alkyl-2-[3H]acetyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine on disposable reversed-phase columns. The enzyme was purified by 25,000-fold and approximately 10% of the starting activity was recovered. Plasma PAF-acetylhydrolase has an apparent molecular weight of 43,000, does not require calcium, has preference for micellar versus monomeric substrate, and exhibits surface dilution kinetics. The purified protein has an apparent Km of 13.7 microM and a Vmax of 568 mumol/h/mg with micellar PAF. It can act both on 1-O-alkyl and 1-acyl substrates and on ethanolamine analogs of PAF. However, the enzyme has a marked preference for the sn-2 acetyl residue and therefore can be considered as a specific PAF-acetylhydrolase.  相似文献   

2.
Human plasma platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase hydrolyzes the sn-2 acetyl residue of PAF, but not phospholipids with long chain sn-2 residues. It is associated with low density lipoprotein (LDL) particles, and is the LDL-associated phospholipase A2 activity that specifically degrades oxidatively damaged phospholipids (Stremler, K. E., Stafforini, D. M., Prescott, S. M., Zimmerman, G. A., and McIntyre, T. M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5331-5334). To identify potential substrates, we synthesized phosphatidylcholines with sn-2 residues from two to nine carbon atoms long, and found the V/k ratio decreased as the sn-2 residue was lengthened: the C5 homolog was 50%, the C6 20%, while the C9 homolog was only 2% as efficient as PAF. However, the presence of an omega-oxo function radically affected hydrolysis: the half-life of the sn-2 9-aldehydic homolog was identical to that of PAF. We oxidized [2-arachidonoyl]phosphatidylcholine and isolated a number of more polar phosphatidylcholines. We treated these with phospholipase C, derivatized the resulting diglycerides for gas chromatographic/mass spectroscopic analysis, and found a number of diglycerides where the m/z ratio was consistent with a series of short to medium length sn-2 residues. We treated the polar phosphatidylcholines with acetylhydrolase and derivatized the products for analysis by gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy. The liberated residues were more polar than straight chain standards and had m/z ratios from 129 to 296, consistent with short to medium chain residues. Therefore, oxidation fragments the sn-2 residue of phospholipids, and the acetylhydrolase specifically degrades such oxidatively fragmented phospholipids.  相似文献   

3.
The platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolases are enzymes that were initially characterized by their ability to hydrolyze platelet-activating factor (PAF). In human plasma, PAF acetylhydrolase (EC 3.1.1.47) circulates in a complex with low density lipoproteins (LDL) and high density lipoproteins (HDL). This association defines the physical state of PAF acetylhydrolase, confers a long half-life, and is a major determinant of its catalytic efficiency in vivo. The lipoprotein-associated enzyme accounts for all of the PAF hydrolysis in plasma but only two-thirds of the protein mass. To characterize the enzyme-lipoprotein interaction, we employed site-directed mutagenesis techniques. Two domains within the primary sequence of human PAF acetylhydrolase, tyrosine 205 and residues 115 and 116, were important for its binding to LDL. Mutation or deletion of those sequences prevented the association of the enzyme with lipoproteins. When residues 115 and 116 from human PAF acetylhydrolase were introduced into mouse PAF acetylhydrolase (which normally does not associate with LDL), the mutant mouse PAF acetylhydrolase associated with lipoproteins. To analyze the role of apolipoprotein (apo) B100 in the formation of the PAF acetylhydrolase-LDL complex, we tested the ability of PAF acetylhydrolase to bind to lipoproteins containing truncated forms of apoB. These studies indicated that the carboxyl terminus of apoB plays a key role in the association of PAF acetylhydrolase with LDL. These data on the molecular basis of the PAF acetylhydrolase-LDL association provide a new level of understanding regarding the pathway for the catabolism of PAF in human blood.  相似文献   

4.
Human macrophages secret platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
When monocytes mature to macrophages, their ability to accumulate the pro-inflammatory lipid autacoid, platelet-activating factor (PAF), is markedly decreased (Elstad, M. R. Stafforini, D. M., McIntyre, T. M., Prescott, S. M., and Zimmerman, G. A. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 8467-8470) in conjunction with a 260-fold increase in the activity of intracellular PAF acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH). We now demonstrate that macrophages also secrete PAF-AH and that the secreted enzyme is biochemically and immunologically identical to the human plasma PAF-AH. It is sensitive to the same active-site-directed inhibitors, has the same electrophoretic mobility, is associated with lipoprotein particles, and transfers between low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein in a pH-dependent manner like the plasma PAF-AH. In addition, both activities hydrolyze oxidatively fragmented phospholipids and PAF. These data indicate that macrophages are a cellular source of the plasma PAF-AH. Thus, macrophages secrete an enzyme that inactivates lipid mediators at sites of inflammation and in plasma. These changes during the maturation of monocytes to macrophages may serve to limit the acute inflammatory response.  相似文献   

5.
We have measured activity of platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase, an enzyme that specifically inactivates PAF, in plasma from patients with essential hypertension and healthy controls. The average activities in 34 patients and 22 controls were 113 +/- 60 and 79 +/- 32 nmol/ml/min, respectively, and the difference was significant (p less than 0.05). Approximately three fourths of the total plasma activity was recovered in LDL, with the remainder in HDL; and there was a significant difference in the activity associated with the LDL between patients and controls. The relative distribution of the activity among lipoproteins was almost equal in the two groups, and there was no difference in plasma lipids or apoproteins between them. In patients there was a tendency for plasma PAF acetylhydrolase activity to increase with the length of the history of hypertension. Further studies are needed to distinguish between a number of reasons for increased levels of plasma PAF acetylhydrolase in essential hypertension.  相似文献   

6.
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a phospholipid (1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) with diverse physiological effects. It has been implicated as a mediator of inflammation, allergy, shock, and thrombosis. Plasma contains an enzyme, PAF acetylhydrolase, that catalyzes the degradation of PAF, and the level of this enzyme may regulate the concentration of PAF in the blood and extracellular spaces under some conditions. Thus, the cellular source(s) of this enzyme and the factors that regulate its synthesis and secretion are issues that may have important physiological and pathological implications. We found that cultures of Hep G2, a human hepatocarcinoma line, secreted PAF acetylhydrolase activity. Optimal secretion occurred in medium that contained serum, and the newly secreted PAF acetylhydrolase was associated with high density and low density lipoproteins (LDL and HDL, respectively), just as the enzyme is in plasma. In the absence of serum. PAF acetylhydrolase was secreted with a particle that had a density similar to HDL. Apolipoproteins B and E were found in the same fractions. We tested the effects of a variety of hormones on the secretion of PAF acetylhydrolase and found that secretion was inhibited by 17 alpha-ethynylestradiol with a maximal effect at 30 microM. This may account for the observation of others that estrogens reduce the activity of PAF acetylhydrolase in the plasma. The PAF acetylhydrolase secreted by Hep G2 cells appeared to be identical to the enzyme in human plasma based on substrate specificity, association with LDL and HDL, response to inhibitors, and reactivity with antibodies against the plasma PAF acetylhydrolase. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that hepatocytes in culture secrete a PAF acetylhydrolase that is apparently identical to the plasma form. The secretion is constitutive but may also be regulated in response to hormonal stimulation.  相似文献   

7.
Human plasma platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase functions by reducing PAF levels as a general anti-inflammatory scavenger and is linked to anaphylactic shock, asthma, and allergic reactions. The enzyme has also been implicated in hydrolytic activities of other pro-inflammatory agents, such as sn-2 oxidatively fragmented phospholipids. This plasma enzyme is tightly bound to low and high density lipoprotein particles and is also referred to as lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2. The crystal structure of this enzyme has been solved from x-ray diffraction data collected to a resolution of 1.5 angstroms. It has a classic lipase alpha/beta-hydrolase fold, and it contains a catalytic triad of Ser273, His351, and Asp296. Two clusters of hydrophobic residues define the probable interface-binding region, and a prediction is given of how the enzyme is bound to lipoproteins. Additionally, an acidic patch of 10 carboxylate residues and a neighboring basic patch of three residues are suggested to play a role in high density lipoprotein/low density lipoprotein partitioning. A crystal structure is also presented of PAF acetylhydrolase reacted with the organophosphate compound paraoxon via its active site Ser273. The resulting diethyl phosphoryl complex was used to model the tetrahedral intermediate of the substrate PAF to the active site. The model of interface binding begins to explain the known specificity of lipoprotein-bound substrates and how the active site can be both close to the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface and at the same time be accessible to the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

8.
The production of platelet-activating factor (PAF) and PAF-like phospholipids that also bind the PAF receptor are implicated in numerous pathological situations including bacterial endotoxemia and injury-induced oxidative damage. PAF and PAF-like phospholipids are hydrolyzed and inactivated by the enzyme PAF acetylhydrolase. In the intact rat, infusion of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into a mesenteric vein served as an acute, liver-focused model of endotoxemia. We determined that the liver responds to LPS exposure with the production of plasma-type PAF acetylhydrolase mRNA and protein expression specifically in the resident macrophages of the liver. Liver macrophages, defined immunohistochemically using antibodies against ED1, present in livers from saline-treated animals contained no detectable PAF acetylhydrolase. Twenty-four hours following in vivo LPS administration, immunohistochemistry detected a slight increase in the number of ED1 staining cells and the ED1-positive cells now contained an abundance of PAF acetylhydrolase. The systemic administration of LPS resulted in increased expression of PAF acetylhydrolase in several tissues. Of the tissues examined, the greatest increase in PAF acetylhydrolase expression was observed in lung followed by increases in spleen, liver, kidney, and thymus. Additionally, the expression of PAF acetylhydrolase mRNA increased in circulating leukocytes and in peritoneal macrophages in response to systemic exposure to LPS. We examined the regulation of PAF acetylhydrolase expression and demonstrated the administration of the PAF receptor antagonists, BN 50739 and WEB 2170, inhibited by 50% the increase in PAF acetylhydrolase expression in response to LPS. The up-regulation of the plasma-type PAF acetylhydrolase expression constitutes an important mechanism for elevating the local and systemic ability to inactivate PAF and oxidized phospholipids in order to minimize PAF-mediated pathophysiology consequent from exposure to endotoxin. The abundance of PAF acetylhydrolase production in the liver lobule likely limits endotoxin-mediated tissue damage due to PAF synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
The degradation of platelet-activating factor (PAF; 1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) in human plasma is brought about by a specific acetylhydrolase that is associated with low-density lipoprotein. In this study, the presence of a similar activity on high-density lipoprotein (HDL) of rat plasma has been demonstrated which is independent of lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity. Furthermore, PAF acetylhydrolase activity may be decreased by 66% by treatment of rats with 17 alpha-ethynyloestradiol (1 mg/kg body wt.; 5 days). This treatment also decreased HDL cholesterol concentrations by 90%, but did not affect LCAT activity. Thus rat LCAT and PAF acetylhydrolase are associated with different subspecies of HDL.  相似文献   

10.
The plasma form of platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH), also known as lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A(2) (Lp-PLA(2)) inactivates potent lipid messengers such as PAF and modified phospholipids generated in settings of oxidant stress. In humans, PAF-AH circulates in blood in fully active form and associates with high and low density lipoproteins (HDL and LDL). Several studies suggest that the location of PAF-AH affects both the catalytic efficiency and the function of the enzyme in vivo. The distribution of PAF-AH among lipoproteins varies widely among mammals. Here, we report that mouse and human PAF-AHs associate with human HDL particles of different density. We made use of this observation in the development of a binding assay to identify domains required for association of human PAF-AH with human HDL. Sequence comparisons among species combined with domain-swapping and site-directed mutagenesis studies led us to the identification of C-terminal residues necessary for the association of human PAF-AH with human HDL. Interestingly, the region identified is not conserved among PAF-AHs, suggesting that PAF-AH interacts with HDL particles in a manner that is unique to each species. These findings contribute to our understanding of the mechanisms responsible for association of human PAF-AH with HDL and may facilitate future studies aimed at precisely determining the function of PAF-AH in each lipoprotein particle.  相似文献   

11.
This clinical study reports that blood levels of the pro-inflammatory mediator platelet-activating factor (PAF) did not change in colorectal cancer patients. In contrast, plasma levels of two enzymatic activities, one implicated in PAF production (i.e. phospholipase A2) and one in PAF degradation (i.e. PAF acetylhydrolase activity) were significantly elevated.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of this study was to investigate, with aging, the activity of two enzymes associated to HDL and responsible for its anti-atherogenic activity; paraoxonase (PON1) and platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH). Ninety-five subjects aged between 26 and 77 years were recruited for the study. The prevalence of phenotype A, AB, and B in our subjects group was 69.47,21.05 and 9.47% respectively. Plasma as well as HDL paraoxonase activity decreased significantly with aging (r =-0.218, P < 0.039) and (r = -0.280, P < 0.006) respectively. PAF-AH activity was unchanged with aging however, we noted a negative correlation between PAF-AH and PON1 activity in HDL (r = -0.243, P < 0.02) and in LDL vs HDL (r =-0.462, P < 0.001).  相似文献   

13.
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is metabolized by a specific enzyme, PAF acetylhydrolase, which may play an important role in the manifestation of the biological activities of PAF in vivo. The activity of PAF acetylhydrolase in plasma of patients with ischemic stroke was higher than that in healthy controls. The incidence of irreversible platelet aggregation in response to PAF, as well as to ADP, was found to be higher in patients than in controls. The patients whose platelets responded with irreversible aggregation to PAF displayed a higher activity of plasma PAF acetylhydrolase than those with only reversible aggregation. In controls, PAF acetylhydrolase activity correlated positively, although weakly, with LDL-cholesterol, which may reflect the major role of LDL in carrying this enzyme. However, since there was no significant difference in plasma levels of lipids and apoproteins between patients and controls (except for apo B) and there was no significant relationship between the enzyme activity and the levels of other lipids and apoproteins, it is unlikely that increased plasma level of PAF acetylhydrolase activity in stroke patients is accounted for by an abnormality of lipoprotein metabolism. Platelet hyperfunction may be associated with augmented generation of PAF, which, in turn, may bring about the induction of the inactivating enzyme, PAF acetylhydrolase.  相似文献   

14.
Acetylhydrolase, the enzyme which inactivates platelet-activating factor (PAF, 1-O-alkyl-2-O-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine), was selectively released from bovine platelets by aggregation with physiological concentrations (0.1-10 nM) of PAF with no cell lysis. The release of the acetylhydrolase paralleled that of serotonin. The acetylhydrolase released was active over a broad pH range (pH 5.4-8.6) and was not affected by Ca2+ (1-4 mM) or EDTA (1-8 mM). The Km value of the enzyme was 4.6 microM. Net specific acetylhydrolase activity recovered in the 130,000 x g supernatant after stimulation with PAF could be determined in the presence of EDTA without the activity of Ca2+-dependent phospholipase A2 which was also released from the cells at the same concentration of PAF. The acetylhydrolase was inhibited competitively by specific PAF antagonists, rac-3-(N-n-octadecylcarbamoyloxy)-2-methyoxypropyl-2-thiazolioe thyl phosphate (CV-3988) and (2RS)-1-O-hexadecyl-2-O-ethyl-3-O-(7-thiazolinoheptyl)-glycerol methanesulfonate (ONO-6040). Their Ki values for the enzyme were 1.17 microM and 0.84 microM, respectively. The release of the enzyme could also be detected when the platelets were aggregated with ADP (2.3 microM) or thrombin (0.5 unit). These results suggest that the enzyme released from the aggregated platelets to the blood plasma may also have a physiological function cooperating with the plasma acetylhydrolase.  相似文献   

15.
The platelet-activating factor (PAF) concentration of the uterus spontaneously increased during pregnancy. When 17alpha-ethynylestradiol (0.25 mg/kg) was administered subcutaneously to pregnant rats for 3 days starting on Day 17 of pregnancy, some rats delivered prematurely on Day 20. However, none of the vehicle-treated (80% dimethylsulfoxide and 20% ethanol) pregnant rats delivered prematurely. The PAF concentration of the uterus in pregnant rats treated with 17alpha-ethynylestradiol was significantly higher than in those treated with vehicle on Days 19 and 20. On the other hand, the specific activity of uterine PAF-acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH) in pregnant rats treated with 17alpha-ethynylestradiol was significantly lower than in those treated with vehicle on Days 19 and 20, and the plasma PAF-AH activity in pregnant rats treated with estrogen was also significantly lower than in treated with vehicle on Days 18, 19, and 20. These findings indicate that estrogen increases PAF concentrations in the rat uterus, and this was correlated with a decrease in PAF-AH in the uterus and plasma. The increase in PAF concentrations in the uterus may be related to premature delivery and labor caused by PAF's known effect on myometrial contraction.  相似文献   

16.
Platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolases (PAF-AHs) are unique PLA2s which hydrolyze the sn-2 ester linkage in PAF-like phospholipids with a marked preference for very short acyl chains, typically acetyl. The recent solution of the crystal structure of the alpha(1) catalytic subunit of isoform Ib of bovine brain intracellular PAF-AH at 1.7 A resolution paved the way for a detailed examination of the molecular basis of substrate specificity in this enzyme. The crystal structure suggests that the side chains of Thr103, Leu48 and Leu194 are involved in substrate recognition. Three single site mutants (L48A, T103S and L194A) were overexpressed and their structures were solved to 2.3 A resolution or better by X-ray diffraction methods. Enzyme kinetics showed that, compared with wild-type protein, all three mutants have higher relative activity against phospholipids with sn-2 acyl chains longer than an acetyl. However, for each of the mutants we observed an unexpected and substantial reduction in the V(max) of the reaction. These results are consistent with the model in which residues Leu48, Thr103 and Leu194 indeed contribute to substrate specificity and in addition suggest that the integrity of the specificity pocket is critical for the expression of full catalytic function, thus conferring very high substrate selectivity on the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Cryopreservation of boar sperm compromises fertility after thawing by reducing sperm longevity and inducing acrosome reaction-like changes. In an attempt to improve the post-thaw motility and acrosome integrity of boar sperm, semen was frozen using a modified Westendorf method in which the medium was supplemented with either platelet-activating factor (PAF) or a recombinant platelet-activating factor:acetylhydrolase (PAF:AH; Pafase) before or after freezing. Platelet-activating factor is a phospholipid that is present in boar semen and PAF:AH is the naturally occurring enzyme that converts PAF to biologically inactive Lyso-PAF. Addition of PAF to the cryopreservation medium improved post-thaw motility immediately after thawing and after 3h incubation at 37 degrees C (60.0+/-0.0% and 25.0+/-2.9%; mean+/-S.E.M.) compared to the control sperm (41.7+/-1.7% and 10.0+/-2.9%; P<0.05). Acrosome integrity was higher immediately after thawing and after 3 and 6h incubation at 37 degrees C when sperm were frozen in the presence of Pafase (55.7+/-3.2%, 45.7+/-3.7% and 23.0+/-3.1%), compared to the control sperm (42.7+/-1.5%, 25.7+/-5.7% and 12.3+/-2.7%) and sperm frozen in the presence of PAF (33.0+/-3.7%, 26.3+/-2.2% and 11.7+/-0.3%; P<0.05). Addition of PAF to sperm after thawing improved motility immediately post-thaw (41.6+/-2.6%), compared with addition of Pafase (23.3+/-2.2%) or the control sperm with no supplementation of the medium (26.7+/-2.2%; P<0.05). However, this beneficial effect was lost by 3h post-thaw. Supplementation of boar semen cryopreservation medium with PAF and Pafase appeared to have beneficial effects on the in vitro quality of the sperm post-thaw.  相似文献   

18.
PAF is a potent inflammatory compound known to stimulate the release of various cytokines involved in rheumatic diseases. Elevated blood PAF levels are reported in these patients. We report that serum PAF acetylhydrolase activity (AHA) levels are decreased in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis as compared to healthy controls. Serum and synovial fluid AHA levels were correlated in these patients. The present study suggests the potential role of AHA in controling systemic and/or local PAF levels in patients with rheumatic diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Brain intracellular platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH) isoform I is a member of a family of complex enzymes composed of mutually homologous alpha(1) and alpha(2) subunits, both of which account for catalytic activity, and the beta subunit. We previously demonstrated that the expression of one catalytic subunit, alpha(1), is developmentally regulated, resulting in a switching of the catalytic complex from alpha(1)/alpha(2) to alpha(2)/alpha(2) during brain development (Manya, H., Aoki, J., Watanabe, M., Adachi, T., Asou, H., Inoue, Y., Arai, H., and Inoue, K. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 18567-18572). In this study, we explored the biochemical differences in three possible catalytic dimers, alpha(1)/alpha(1), alpha(1)/alpha(2), and alpha(2)/alpha(2). The alpha(2)/alpha(2) homodimer exhibited different substrate specificity from the alpha(1)/alpha(1) homodimer and the alpha(1)/alpha(2) heterodimer, both of which showed similar substrate specificity. The alpha(2)/alpha(2) homodimer hydrolyzed PAF and 1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylethanolamine (AAGPE) most efficiently among 1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-phospholipids. In contrast, both alpha(1)/alpha(1) and alpha(1)/alpha(2) hydrolyzed 1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoric acid more efficiently than PAF. AAGPE was the poorest substrate for these enzymes. The beta subunit bound to all three catalytic dimers but modulated the enzyme activity in a catalytic dimer composition-dependent manner. The beta subunit strongly accelerated the enzyme activity of the alpha(2)/alpha(2) homodimer but rather suppressed the activity of the alpha(1)/alpha(1) homodimer and had little effect on that of the alpha(1)/alpha(2) heterodimer. The (His(149) to Arg) mutant beta, which has been recently identified in isolated lissencephaly sequence patients, lost the ability to either associate with the catalytic complexes or modulate their enzyme activity. The enzyme activity of PAF-AH isoform I may be regulated in multiple ways by switching the composition of the catalytic subunit and by manipulating the beta subunit.  相似文献   

20.
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a glycerophospholipid that has diverse potent biological actions. A plasma enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of the sn-2 acetoyl group of PAF and thereby abolishes its bioactivity. This PAF acetylhydrolase is specific for phospholipids, such as PAF, with a short acyl group at the sn-2 position. The majority of it (60-70%) is associated with low density lipoprotein (LDL), and the remainder is with high density lipoprotein (HDL). LDL also has a phospholipase A2 activity that is specific for oxidized polyunsaturated fatty acids, which may be important in determining how LDL is recognized by cellular receptors. We previously have purified and characterized the PAF acetylhydrolase from human plasma. We now have found that the purified PAF acetylhydrolase catalyzes the hydrolysis of the oxidized fragments of arachidonic acid from the sn-2 position of phosphatidylcholine. One of the preferred substrates appeared by mass spectrometry to have 5-oxovalerate at the sn-2 position. We synthesized 1-palmitoyl-2-(5-oxovaleroyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and found that the PAF acetylhydrolase had the same apparent Km for it (11.3 microM) as for PAF (12.5 microM), with Vmax values of 100 and 167 mumol/h/mg of protein, respectively. We also conclude that the PAF acetylhydrolase is the sole activity in LDL that degrades oxidized phospholipids since we found co-localization of the activity against both substrates to LDL and HDL, and precipitation of enzyme activity with an antibody to the PAF acetylhydrolase. Thus, the PAF acetylhydrolase in human plasma degrades oxidized phospholipids, which may be involved in the modification of apolipoprotein B100 and other pathological processes.  相似文献   

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