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1.
For a better definition of the role of human serum apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) in high density lipoprotein structure, a systematic investigation was carried out on factors influencing the in vitro association of this apoprotein with lipids obtained from the parent high density lipoprotein (HDL); these lipids include phospholipids, free cholesterol, cholesteryl esters, and triglycerides. Following equilibration, mixtures of apo A-I and lipids in varying stoichiometric amounts were fractionated by sequential flotation, CsCl density gradient ultracentrifugation, or gel-permeation chromatography, and the isolated complexes were characterized by physicochemical means. As defined by operational criteria (flotation at density 1,063 to 1.21 g/ml), only two types of HDL complexes were reassembled; one, reconstituted HDLS, small with a radius of 31 A, and the other, reconstituted HDLL, large with a radius of 39 A. The two types incorporated all of the lipid constituents of native HDL and contained 2 and 3 mol of apo A-I, respectively. A maximal yield of reconstituted HDL (R-HDL) was observed at an initial protein concentration of 0.1 muM, where apo A-I is predominantly monomeric. At increasing protein concentrations, the amount of apo A-I recovered in R-HDL was found to be proportional to the initial concentration of monomer and dimer in solution. The composition and yield of the complexes were independent of ionic strength and pH within the ranges studied. Both simple incubation and cosonication of apo A-I with HDL phospholipids produced complexes of identical composition, although the yeild of complexes was higher with co-sonication. When the comparison of the same methods was extended to mixtures of apo A-I and whole HDL lipids, the results confirmed previous observations that co-sonication is essential for the incorporation of the neutral lipid into the R-HDL complexes. The results indicate that (a) in vitro complexation of apo A-I with lipids is under kinetic control; (b) apo A-I can generate a lipid-protein complex with properties similar to those of the parent lipoprotein; (c) the process requires well defined experimental conditions and, most importantly, the presence in solution of monomers and dimers of apo A-I; (d) the number of apo A-I molecules incorporated into R-HDL determines the size and structure of the reassembled particle. All of these observations strongly support the essential role of apo A-I in the structure of human HDL.  相似文献   

2.
The human apolipoproteins are secretory proteins some of which have been shown to undergo proteolytic processing and post-translational addition of carbohydrate. Apolipoprotein A-I (apo-A-I), the predominant protein associated with high density lipoproteins, undergoes co-translational proteolytic processing as well as post-translational conversion of proapo-A-I to mature apo-A-I following cellular secretion. Utilizing the human hepatoma cell line HEP-G2, we have established that, in addition to proteolytic processing, secreted nascent apo-A-I is acylated with palmitate. Uniformly labeled [14C]palmitate and [1-14C]palmitate were each incorporated into apo-A-I when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The acylation of apo-A-I with palmitate was confirmed by immunoprecipitation and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Hydroxylamine treatment resulted in the deacylation of apo-A-I. Although three of the apo-A-I isoforms analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis were shown to contain radio-labeled palmitate, 80% of acylated apo-A-I was in the proapolipoprotein A-I isoform. [14C]Oleate was not incorporated in secreted apo-A-I, indicating the specificity of the acylation of apo-A-I. Incubation of [14C] palmitate-acylated apo-A-I in serum and plasma under conditions in which proapo-A-I is proteolytically cleaved to mature apo-A-I did not result in deacylation. These data establish that fatty acid acylation occurs in human secretory proteins in addition to the previously reported acylation of cellular membrane proteins. These results suggest that the covalent linkage of lipids to apolipoproteins may play a critical role in apolipoprotein and lipoprotein metabolism.  相似文献   

3.
To determine the apolipoprotein specificity of high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptor, apolipoprotein A-I (apo-AI) and apolipoprotein A-II (apo-AII) purified from high density lipoprotein3 (HDL3) were reconstituted into dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles (DMPC) and their ability to bind to luteinized rat ovarian membranes was examined. Both 125I-apo-A-I.DMPC and 125I-apo-A-II.DMPC were shown to bind to ovarian membranes with Kd = 2.87 and 5.70 micrograms of protein/ml, respectively. The binding of both 125I-apo-A-I.DMPC and 125I-apo-A-II.DMPC was inhibited by unlabeled HDL3, apo-A-I.DMPC, apo-A-II.DMPC, apo-C-I.DMPC, apo-C-II.DMPC, apo-C-III1.DMPC, and apo-C-III2.DMPC, but not by DMPC vesicles, bovine serum albumin.DMPC or low density lipoprotein. Since the binding labeled apo-A-I.DMPC and apo-A-II.DMPC was inhibited by the DMPC complexes of apo-C groups, the direct binding of 125I-apo-C-III1.DMPC was also demonstrated with Kd = 9.6 micrograms of protein/ml. In addition, unlabeled apo-A-I.DMPC, and apo-A-II.DMPC, as well as apo-C.DMPC, inhibited 125I-HDL3 binding. 125I-apo-A-I, 125I-apo-A-II, and 125I-apo-C-III1 in the absence of DMPC also bind to the membranes. These results suggest that HDL receptor recognizes apolipoprotein AI, AII, and the C group and that the binding specificity of the reconstituted lipoproteins is conferred by their apolipoprotein moiety rather than the lipid environment. In vivo pretreatment of rats with human chorionic gonadotropin resulted in an increase of 125I-apo-A-I.DMPC, 125I-apo-A-II.DMPC, and 125I-apo-C-III1.DMPC binding activities. However, no induction of binding activity was observed when the apolipoprotein was not included in DMPC vesicles. An examination of the equilibrium dissociation constant and binding capacity for 125I-apo-A-I.DMPC and 125I-apo-A-II.DMPC after human chorionic gonadotropin treatment revealed that the increase in binding activity was due to an increase in the number of binding sites rather than a change in the binding affinity. These results further support our contention that apo-A-I, apo-A-II, and the apo-C group bind to HDL receptor. In conclusion, the HDL receptor of luteinized rat ovary recognizes apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, and the C group but not low density lipoprotein, and the binding is induced by human chorionic gonadotropin in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction between apolipoprotein A-I and small unilamellar vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine at the lipid phase transition resulted in complete release of vesicle contents at molar ratios of lipid to protein from 4000:1 down to 50:1. This indicated the existence of two types of stable complexes: a vesicular apo-A-I complex with a maximum of two to three apo-A-Is/vesicle, and a micellar complex (disc) with a stoichiometry of about 50 phosphatidylcholines/apo-A-I (mol/mol). We characterized the complexes by density gradient centrifugation, by gel filtration, and by immunoprecipitation using an anti-apo-A-I antibody. The morphology of the discs was similar to that of previously reported discs. Apo-A-I-induced release of vesicle contents was monitored by the relief of self-quenching of vesicle-encapsulated carboxyfluorescein. Using this assay we characterized the nature of the interaction between apo-A-I and phospholipid vesicles. The formation of complexes between vesicles and apo-A-I followed a two-step process; below or above the lipid phase transition temperature (Tc), apo-A-I bound to phosphatidylcholine vesicles but caused little leakage of contents. Kinetic analysis of the interaction between apo-A-I and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles below Tc indicated that about 1 in 500 collisions leads to a stable apo-A-I-vesicle complex. The second step involved passage of those complexes through Tc, which resulted in a very rapid transition into discs or vesicular complexes. Vesicular complexes contain apo-A-I which was no longer capable of interacting with pure lipid. Discs, on the other hand, interacted with vesicles at their phase transition.  相似文献   

5.
The molecular interactions and spatial arrangements of phospholipids and apoproteins of human high-density lipoprotein were studied by a chemical approach. Phosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelins substituted with fatty acyl residues of high specific radioactivity and labelled with the photosensitive azido group in specific positions were prepared by chemical synthesis. They were recombined with apolipoprotein A-I of human serum high density lipoprotein. The lipoprotein complexes containing either azido lecithins or azidosphingo-myelins were purified by agarose chromatography from excess lipids. The irradiation was performed under conditions which prohibit the interference with the apoprotein structure as proven by circular dichroism, fluorescence spectroscopy, immunodiffusion test and disc electrophoresis. Non-covalently bound lipid molecules were removed by Sephadex LH 20 chromatography. Mild alkaline treatment liberated radioactive fatty acids which were not directly linked to the polypeptide chain, but rather via neighbouring phospholipid molecules. The lipoprotein appeared as a single radioactive band in dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as seen by radioscanning, which further proved the covalent linkage of the fatty acyl residues to the polypeptide chain. In the immunodiffusion test, there is no difference between covalently crosslinked phospholipid-apoLp A-I complex and the non-photolyticall treated complex. This is the first chemical proof of the spatial relationship of the hydrophobic side chains of the lipid and polypeptide chains in a lipoprotein complex.  相似文献   

6.
Human or bovine A-I apolipoproteins in solution form complexes with sonicated L-alpha-dimirystoyl phosphatidylcholine at 23 and 37 degrees, but not at 8 degrees, suggesting a strong dependence of the interaction on the physical state of the lipid (phase transition temperature 23 degrees). Complexes were isolated by gel filtration on a Sepharose 4B column and were subsequently analyzed for protein and lipid content, molecular weight, and physical state of the lipid portion. The average stoichiometry of all complexes, regardless of the initial concentrations or ratios of protein and lipid, was constant: 90 +/- 20 mol of phospholipid/mol of protein monomer, suggesting a highly cooperative interaction. Sedimentation equilibrium experiments indicated homogeneous macromolecular preparations and gave molecular weights around 235,000 (+/- 15%) for the complexes, with the human and bovine apo-A-I proteins contributing 77,000 (+/- 10%), i.e. about three protein subunits per complex. The lipid portion of the complexes retained some characteristics of a bilayer: it had a broad phase transition with a midpoint at 25.5 degrees as reported by the fluorescence polarization of the lipophilic probe diphenylhexatriene. Above the phase transition temperature the mobility of the phospholipids in the complexes with both apo-A-I proteins was considerably decreased relative to the pure L-alpha-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine dispersion; below the phase transition temperature the opposite was true, i.e. the protein fluidized the lipids. The results indicate that apol-A-I proteins interact stoichiometrically with L-alpha-dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles above the gel to liquid-crystalline transition temperature of the lipid, promoting the destruction of vesicles and the formation of well defined particles of the general size of high density serum lipoproteins.  相似文献   

7.
The origin and the functional significance of apo-A-I polymorphism in man has been investigated. Together with proapo-A-I (identified as A-I1 of the polymorphic series), four other isoforms are found in human plasma, namely A-I2, A-I3, A-I4, and A-I5. A-I3 is the "mature" product of proapo-A-I conversion in plasma. In this study we provide evidence that the other, more acidic, mature apo-A-I isoproteins are derived from A-I3 by a stepwise deamidation process. This conclusion is based on the following observations. 1) Incubation of A-I3 or A-I4, either free or associated with high density lipoprotein, produces a series of more acidic isoproteins corresponding to the sequence found in plasma. The conversion process fits in well with a first order reaction, and A-I3 to A-I4 conversion occurs virtually at the same rate as A-I4 to A-I5 conversion. 2) A-I3 and A-I4 have the same NH2- and C-terminal residues. 3) Formation of apo-A-I acidic isoproteins is accompanied by liberation of ammonia. In order to investigate whether deamidation of apo-A-I results in the production of forms which have different catabolism, a series of turnover studies was carried out in normal volunteers. A-I3 and A-I4 residence times in plasma were, respectively, 3.50 +/- 0.16 and 3.00 +/- 0.10 days (mean +/- S.E.; n = 3). Degradation rate of A-I3 was 8.81 +/- 0.69 mg/kg/day and that of A-I4 was 1.66 +/- 0.15 mg/kg/day (mean +/- S.E.; n = 3). Conversion of A-I3 to A-I4 and A-I4 to A-I5 occurred at the same rate in vivo as that observed in vitro. These results are consistent with the concept that A-I3 is the precursor to the other mature apo-A-I isoforms in plasma. A-I3 is the major isoform through which apo-A-I is eliminated from plasma.  相似文献   

8.
Exchangeable apolipoproteins A-I and A-II play distinct roles in reverse cholesterol transport. ApoA-I interacts with phospholipids and cholesterol of the cell membrane to make high density lipoprotein particles whereas apolipoprotein A-II interacts with high density lipoprotein particles to release apolipoprotein A-I. The two proteins show a high activity at the aqueous solution/lipid interface and are characterized by a high content of amphipathic α-helices built upon repetition of the same structural motif. We set out to investigate to what extent the number of α-helix repeats of this structural motif modulates the affinity of the protein for lipids and the sensitivity to lipid packing. To this aim we have compared the insertion of apolipoproteins A-I and A-II in phospholipid monolayers formed on a Langmuir trough in conditions where lipid packing, surface pressure and charge were controlled. We also used atomic force microscopy to obtain high resolution topographic images of the surface at a resolution of several nanometers and performed statistical image analysis to calculate the spatial distribution and geometrical shape of apolipoproteins A-I and A-II clusters. Our data indicate that apolipoprotein A-I is sensitive to packing of zwitterionic lipids but insensitive to the packing of negatively charged lipids. Interestingly, apolipoprotein A-II proved to be insensitive to the packing of zwitterionic lipids. The different sensitivity to lipid packing provides clues as to why apolipoprotein A-II barely forms nascent high density lipoprotein particles while apolipoprotein A-I promotes their formation. We conclude that the different interfacial behaviors of apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein A-II in lipidic monolayers are important determinants of their distinctive roles in lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
Reassembly experiments, involving isolated human apoproteins A-I and A-II and (dimyristoylglycerophosphocholine)-cholesterol vesicles were performed with apoprotein mixtures at apoprotein A-I/A-II molar ratios varying between 0 and 3. The apoproteins were incubated at 24 degrees C. 28 degrees C and 32 degrees C with either pure dimyristoyl-glycerophosphocholine vesicles or with dimyristoylglycerophosphocholine cholesterol vesicles containing 2, 5, 10, 15 mol/100 mol cholesterol. The kinetics of association were followed by measuring the increase of the fluorescence polarization ratio after labeling the lipids with diphenyl hexatriene. The complexes were separated from the free protein by gradient ultracentrifugation. Total protein was assayed and the apoproteins A-I and A-II were quantified separately by immunonephelometry. The content of apoprotein A-I was also monitored by measuring the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The results suggest that apoprotein A-II has a greater affinity than apoprotein A-I for the phospholipid-cholesterol vesicles and that apoprotein A-II is able to quantitatively displace apoprotein A-I from the lipid-protein complexes. The content of apoprotein A-II in the complexes increases proportionally to the concentration of apoprotein A-II in the incubation mixture until saturation is reached. At saturation the dimyristoylglycerophosphocholine/apoprotein A-II ratio in the complex is dependent upon the cholesterol content of the original vesicles and increases from 60 to 275 mol/mol between 0 and 15 mol/100 mol cholesterol. From these experiments one can calculate that 1 mol human apoprotein A-I is displaced by 2 mol human apoprotein A-II.  相似文献   

10.
The complete amino acid sequence of apolipoprotein A-I (apo-A-I) from canine serum high density lipoproteins (HLD) has been determined by automated Edman degradation of the intact protein and proteolytic fragments derived therefrom. The major strategy involved analysis of overlapping sets of peptides generated by cleavage at lysyl residues with Myxobacter protease and by tryptic hydrolysis at arginines in the citraconylated protein derivative. Canine apo-A-I has 232 residues in its single polypeptide chain and its covalent structure is highly homologous to one of the two reported sequences for human apo-A-I. As in the case for the human apoprotein, predictive analysis of the canine apo-A-I sequence suggests that it comprises a series of amphiphilic alpha helices punctuated by a periodic array of prolyl residues. Human HDL contains a second major protein component, apolipoprotein A-II (apo-A-II) that is lacking in HDL from dog serum. The absence of apo-A-II in canine HDL raised the possibility that the apo-A-I from this source might contain within its primary structure sequences related to apo-A-II and thus perform the dual function of both proteins in one. Our analysis proves that canine apo-A-I has all of the structural features of human apo-A-I and that it is not an A-I: A-II hybrid molecule.  相似文献   

11.
Tissue sites of degradation of apoprotein A-I in the rat   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
The tissue sites of degradation of apoprotein A-I were determined in the rat in vivo using a newly developed tracer of protein catabolism, an adduct of 125I-tyramine and cellobiose. This methodology takes advantage of the fact that when a protein labeled with 125I-tyramine-cellobiose is taken up and degraded, the radiolabeled ligand remains trapped intracellularly. Thus, radio-iodine accumulation in a tissue acts as a cumulative measure of protein degradation in that tissue. In the present studies, apoprotein AI (apo-A-I) was labeled with tyramine-cellobiose (TC). The TC-labeled apo-A-I was then reassociated with high density lipoprotein (HDL) in vivo by injection into donor animals. After 30 min, serum from donor animals was recovered and then injected into recipient rats. TC-labeled apo-A-I in the donor serum was shown to be exclusively associated with HDL. The fractional catabolic rate of 125I-TC-apo-A-I was not significantly different from that of conventionally labeled apo-A-I. The kidney was the major site of degradation, accounting for 39% of the total. The liver was responsible for 26% of apo-A-I catabolism, 96% of which occurred in hepatocytes. The kidney was also the most active organ of catabolism/g of wet weight. The tissues next most active/g of wet weight were ovary and adrenal, a finding that is compatible with a special role of HDL in the rat for delivery of cholesterol for steroidogenesis. Immunofluorescence studies of frozen sections of rat kidney demonstrated the presence of apo-A-I on the brush-border and in apical granules of proximal tubule epithelial cells. Preliminary studies using HDL labeled both with 125I-TC-apo-A-I and [3H]cholesteryl ethers again demonstrated high rates of renal uptake of apo-A-I but less than 1% of total ether uptake. It is postulated that the high activity of kidney was not due to uptake of intact HDL particles, but rather, due to glomerular filtration and tubular reabsorption of free apo-A-I.  相似文献   

12.
Three mouse monoclonal antibodies specific for human apolipoprotein (apo) A-I and one specific for human apo-A-II were characterized with respect to their binding of high density lipoprotein (HDL) particles in solution. The apo-A-II-specific antibody bound 85% of 125I-HDL and 100% of soluble 125I-apo-A-II. However, none of the apo-A-I-specific antibodies bound greater than 60% of either HDL or soluble apo-A-I. Technical issues such as limiting amounts of antibody or antigen, radioiodination of the ligands, unavailability of the epitopes for reaction with antibody, selective binding of apo-A-I isoforms, and individual allotypic differences in apo-A-I were not responsible for the observed incomplete binding of all HDL and apo-A-I. The results suggested the existence of intrinsic immunochemical heterogeneity of apo-A-I both as organized on HDL as well as in free apo-A-I in solution. The validity of this observed heterogeneity was supported by demonstrating that (i) increased binding of HDL occurred when each of the apo-A-I antibodies was combined to form an oligoclonal antibody mixture, and (ii) 100% binding of HDL occurred when two apo-A-I antibodies were combined with the single apo-A-II antibody. To understand the basis for the heterogeneity of expression of apo-A-I epitopes on HDL, two hypotheses were examined. The first hypothesis that these apo-A-I antibodies distinguished apo-A-I molecules from different synthetic sources was not substantiated. Two of the antibodies bound epitopes on apo-A-I molecules in both thoracic duct lymph as an enriched source of intestinal HDL and the culture supernatants of the hepatic cell line Hep G2 as a source of hepatic HDL. The second hypothesis that the antibodies identified differences in the expression of apo-A-I on HDL subpopulations that were distinguished on the basis of size or net particle charge, i.e. organizational heterogeneity, appeared to provide the best available explanation for the immunochemical heterogeneity of apo-A-I in HDL. Relative differences in the expression of three distinct apo-A-I epitopes were demonstrated in HDL subpopulations obtained by either density gradient ultracentrifugation or chromatofocusing. In light of these studies, we conclude that there is intrinsic heterogeneity in the expression of intramolecular loci representing the apo-A-I epitopes identified by our monoclonal antibodies. Such heterogeneity must be considered in analysis of the biology and physiology of apo-A-I and lipoprotein particles bearing this chain.  相似文献   

13.
Apoproteins of the lipoproteins in a nonrecirculating perfusate of rat liver.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The apoproteins of serum lipoproteins and of lipoproteins present in a nonrecirculating perfusate of rat liver were compared by immunochemical, gel electrophoretic, and solubility techniques. Serum and perfusate very low density lipoprotein apoprotein composition were not different. No evidence for the presence of a lipoprotein resembling serum low density lipoprotein was obtained. However, the apoprotein composition of circulatory high density lipoprotein was quantitatively different from the secretory product in the density 1.06-1.21 range. As measured by stained sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoretic patterns, the arginine-rich protein was the major secretory apoprotein while the A-I protein was the major apoprotein in circulating high density lipoprotein. A very similar pattern was seen in perfusates of orotic acid-fatty livers. It was concluded that although the liver secrets lipoproteins in the high density class, circulatory high density lipoprotein is largely a product of catabolic processes.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) on the transfer of cholesterol esters mediated by lipid transfer protein (LTP) and its affinity for lipid and lipoprotein particles were investigated. When the single bilayer vesicle preparations (containing phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol, cholesteryl ester, and apolipoprotein- (apo) A-I at the molar ratio of 90:30:1.2:0.18) or high density lipoprotein 3 (HDL3) were used as the cholesteryl ester donor and low density lipoproteins (LDL) as the acceptor, the transfer activity of LTP was enhanced by the addition of low concentrations of LCAT. In contrast, no enhancement of cholesteryl ester transfer was observed upon addition of LCAT to either the discoidal bilayer particle preparations (containing phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol, cholesteryl ester, and apo-A-I at the molar ratio of 90:30:1.2:1.0) or high density lipoprotein 2 (HDL2). Although both apo-A-I and apo-A-II promoted the transfer of cholesteryl ester from vesicles to LDL, the additional enhancement of the transfer by LCAT was observed only with the vesicles containing apo-A-I. Gel permeation chromatography of LTP/vesicle and LTP/HDL3 mixtures in the presence and absence of LCAT showed that the affinity of LTP for both the vesicles and HDL3 increased upon addition of LCAT. In contrast, neither HDL2 nor discoidal bilayer particles showed any significant enhancement of LTP binding upon addition of LCAT. By using LCAT covalently bound to Sepharose 4B, a maximal interaction between LTP and bound LCAT was shown to occur at the ionic strength of 0.16. Deviation from this ionic strength reduced the extent of the interaction. At the ionic strength of 0.01 and 0.5, the elution volume of LTP was identical to that of bovine serum albumin.  相似文献   

15.
The plasma lipoproteins of estrogen-treated and untreated sexually immature hens have been compared with respect to their concentration in plasma, protein and lipid composition, particle size, and and apoprotein composition. Administration of diethylstilbestrol resulted in a 400-fold rise in the concentration of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), a 70-fold rise in low density lipoprotein (LDL), and a marked reduction in high density lipoprotein (HDL) protein. It also resulted in the production of LDL and HDL which were enriched in triacylglycerol, while the proportion of cholesterol in all three lipoprotein fractions decreased. In contrast to the lipoproteins from untreated birds, lipoproteins of density less than 1.06 g/ml from estrogen-treated birds were not clearly separable into discrete VLDL and LDL fractions, but appeared to be a single ultracentrifugal class. The apoprotein composition of VLDL and LDL from untreated birds differed from each other; however, the apoprotein patterns of VLDL and LDL from estrogen-treated birds were indistinguishable: both contained a large amount of low molecular weight protein in addition to the high molecular weight component that predominates in the untreated state. The apoprotein composition of HDL was also markedly altered by estrogen administration: the 28,000 mol. wt. protein (apo A-I) decreased in amount from 65% to less than 5% of the total, while a low molecular weight (Mr = 14,000) protein and as yet poorly defined high molecular weight components became predominant. These observations indicate that the hyperlipidemia induced by estrogen administration is accompanied by marked alterations, both qualitative and quantitative, in the plasma lipoproteins.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in whole plasma and lipoprotien apoprotein concentrations were determined after a single injection of Triton WR 1339 into rats. Concentrations of apoproteins A-I (an activator of lecithin:cholesterol acyl transferase), arginine-rich apoprotein (ARP), and B apoprotein were measured by electroimmunoassay. The content of C-II apoprotein (an activaor of lipoprotein lipase) was estimated by the ability of plasma and lipoprotein fractions to promote hydrolysis of triglyceride in the presence of cow's milk lipase and also by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gels. Apoproteins C-II and A-I were rapidly removed from high density lipoprotein (HDL) after Triton treatment and were recovered in the d 1.21 g/ml infranate fraction. A-I was then totally cleared from the plasma within 10--20 hr after injection. Arginine-rich apoprotein was removed from HDL and also partially cleared from the plasma. The rise in very low density lipoprotein (vldl) apoprotein that followed the removal of apoproteins from HDL was mostly antributed to the B apoprotein, although corresponding smaller increases were observed in VLDL ARP and C apoproteins. The triglyceride:cholesterol, triglyceride:protein, and B:C apoprotein ratios of VLDL more closely resembled nascent rather than plasma VLDL 10 hr after Triton injection. These studies suggest that the detergent may achieve its hyperlipidemic effct by disrupting HDL and thus removing the A-I and C-II proteins from a normal activating environment compirsing VLDL, HDL, and the enzymes. The possible involvement of intact HDL in VLDL catabolism is discussed in relation to other recent reports which also suggest that abnormalities of the VLDL-LDL system may be due to the absence of normal HDL.  相似文献   

17.
Incubation of 125I-labeled very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) with lipoprotein lipase-rich (postheparin) plasma obtained from intact or supradiaphragmatic rats resulted in the transfer of more than 80% of apoprotein C from VLDL to high density lipoprotein (HDL), whereas apoprotein B was associated with lipoprotein of density less than 1.019 g/ml (intermediate lipoprotein). The transfer of 125I-labeled apoprotein C from VLDL to HDL increased with time and decreased in proportion to the amount of VLDL in the incubation system. A relationship was established between the content of triglycerides and apoprotein C in VLDL, whereas the amount of apoprotein C in VLDL was independent of that of other apoproteins, especially apoprotein B. The injection of heparin to rats preinjected with 125I-labeled VLDL caused apoprotein interconversions similar to those observed in vitro. The intermediate lipoprotein was relatively rich in apoprotein B, apoprotein VS-2, cholesterol, and phospholipids and poor in triglycerides and apoprotein C. The mean diameter of intermediate lipoprotein was 269 A (compared with 427 A, the mean Sf rate was 30.5 (compared with 115), and the mean weight was 7.0 X 10(6) daltons (compared with 23.1 X 10(6)). From these data it was possible to calculate the mass of lipids and apoproteins in single lipoprotein particles. The content of apoprotein B in both particles was virtually identical, 0.7 X 10(6) daltons. The relative amount of all other constituents in intermediate lipoprotein was lower than in VLDL: triglycerides, 22%; free cholesterol, 37%; esterified cholesterol, 68%; phospholipids, 41%; apoprotein C, 7%, and VS-2 apoprotein, 60%. The data indicate that (a) one and only one intermediate lipoprotein is formed from each VLDL particle, and (b) during the formation of the intermediate lipoprotein all lipid and apoprotein components other than apoprotein B leave the density range of VLDL to a varying degree. Whether these same changes occur during the clearance of VLDL in vivo is yet to be established.  相似文献   

18.
In a continued investigation of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase reaction with micellar, discoidal complexes of phosphatidylcholine (PC) . cholesterol . apolipoprotein A-I (apo-A-I), we prepared well defined complexes with variable free cholesterol contents and examined their reactivity with purified enzyme. The complexes, prepared by the sodium cholate dialysis method, were fractionated into "small" and "large" classes by gel filtration of the reaction mixtures through a Bio-Gel A-5m column. The small complexes had egg-PC/cholesterol/apo-A-I molar ratios from 68:14:1 to 80:1:1, discoidal shapes with diameters around 114 (+/- 13) A and widths of 42 A by electron microscopy, and Stokes radii from 47 to 49 A corresponding to molecular weights near 2 X 10(5). The corresponding properties of the large complexes, isolated from samples with higher cholesterol contents, were egg-PC/cholesterol/apo-A-I molar ratios from 84:26:1 to 96:17:1, diameters of 161 (+/- 20) A, widths of 43 A, Stokes radii around 80 A, and estimated molecular weights in the vicinity of 5 X 10(5). Both types of complexes, when adjusted to equal apo-A-I concentrations, gave essentially identical initial reaction velocities with purified lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase over a wide range of cholesterol concentrations (from 2 X 10(-7) to 4 X 10(-4) M), PC/cholesterol molar ratios (from 3:1 to 12:1), and quite different lipid fluidity conditions as detected by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence polarization. When complexes were adjusted to a constant cholesterol concentration, the initial velocities of the lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase reaction followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics relative to the apo-A-I concentrations. Arrhenius plots of initial reaction rates for various complexes with variable cholesterol content and fluidity, measured at constant apo-A-I concentrations, gave identical temperature dependences with an average activation energy of 18.0 kcal/mol. These results strongly suggest that the cholesterol esterification on high density lipoprotein particles does not depend on their unesterified-cholesterol contents, PC/unesterified-cholesterol molar ratios, nor on the fluidity of their lipid domains.  相似文献   

19.
The four peptide analogs of the amphipathic helix whose interactions with dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine were described in the preceding paper were compared with apolipoproteins (apo) A-I and A-II in ability to displace native apolipoprotein from high density lipoprotein (HDL) and in ability to activate lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase. The rank order of the ability of the four peptide analogs to displace apo-A-I from intact HDL was 18A-Pro-18A greater than 18A greater than des-Val10-18A greater than reverse-18A, the same order suggested in the preceding paper for relative lipid affinities. Modified HDL from which 40% of the apo-A-I had been displaced by 18A was indistinguishable from unmodified HDL in its ability to act as a lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase substrate. This suggests that the easily displaced apo-A-I molecules in polydisperse HDL are relatively ineffectual as lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activators and/or 18A replaces the lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity lost. The peptide analog 18A-Pro-18A was found to be a powerful activator of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase when incubated with unilamellar egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles, reaching 140% of the activity of apo-A-I at a 1:1.75 peptide-to-egg PC ratio. In another experiment, it was found that discoidal egg PC complexes of 18A-Pro-18A, 18A, and des-Val10-18A, formed by cholate dialysis, had 30-45% of the activity of apo-A-I/egg PC discoidal complexes, also formed by cholate dialysis, at the same peptide/lipid weight ratio. Examination of the structures formed when the 18A-Pro-18A peptide was incubated with unilamellar egg PC vesicles indicated that the ability of 18A-Pro-18A to exceed apo-A-I in lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activating ability is due to the spontaneous conversion by 18A-Pro-18A of egg PC vesicles to small protein annulus-bilayer disc structures. Apo-A-I, apo-A-II, nor any of the other three peptide analogs of the amphipathic helix studied were able to convert a significant fraction of egg PC unilamellar vesicles to discoidal structures.  相似文献   

20.
A double antibody radioimmunoassay technique was developed for quantification of apolipoprotein A-I, the major apoprotein of rat high density lipoprotein. Apo A-I was labeled with 125I by the chloramine-T method. 125I-labeled apo A-I had the same electrophoretic mobility as unlabeled apo A-I and more than 80% of the 125I was precipitated by rabbit anti apo A-I antibodies. The assay is sensitive at the level of 0.5-5 ng, and has intraassay and interassay coefficients of variation of 4.5 and 6.5% respectively. The specificity of the assay was established by competitive displacement of 125I-labeled apo A-I from its antibody by apo A-I and lipoproteins containing apo A-I, but not by rat albumin and other apoproteins. Immunoreactivity of high density lipoprotein and serum was only about 35% of that of their delipidated forms when Veronal buffer was used as a diluent. Inclusion of 5 mM sodium decyl sulfate in the incubation mixture brought out reactivity equivalent to that found after delipidation. Completeness of the reaction was verified by comparison with the amount of apo A-I in chromatographic fractions of the total apoprotein of high density lipoprotein. Content (weight %, mean values +/- S.D.) of immunoassayable apo A-I was: 62.3 +/- 5.9 in high density lipoprotein; 1.7 +/- 0.3 in low density lipoprotein; 0.09 +/- 0.03 in very low density lipoprotein and 25.0 +/- 5.0 in lymp chylomicrons. Concentration in whole serum was 51.4 +/- 8.9 mg/dl and 33.6 +/- 4.1 mg/dl for female and male rats, respectively (p less than 0.002), equivalent to the sex difference in concentration of high density lipoprotein. 95% of the apo A-I in serum was in high density lipoprotein, 5% in proteins of d greater than 1.21 g/ml and less than 1% in lipoproteins of d less than 1.063 g/ml.  相似文献   

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