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1.
Livers from fasted male rats were perfused with blood containing 30% carboxyhemoglobin. Chylomicron remnants (labelled with [3H] cholesterol and [14C] oleate), prepared in functionally hepatectomized rats, were added to the perfusate. Carboxyhemoglobin decreased hepatic uptake of remnant cholesterol and increased the amount of lipoprotein flushed out of the liver at the end of perfusion. Transfer of triacylglycerol fatty acids to phospholipid and formation of d>1.006 lipoproteins was diminished. Ketogenesis was increased and lipoprotein triacylglycerol secretion decreased. The data indicate an inhibition of hepatic remnant catabolism by carboxyhemoglobin and are discussed with reference to the possible role of smoking in atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrolysis by endothelial lipases of triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins of diabetic origin were compared to lipoproteins of non-diabetic origin. The plasma lipoprotein fraction of density < 1.006 g/ml, including chylomicrons and VLDL, were incubated in vitro with post-heparin plasma (PHP) lipases. The lipoproteins of diabetic origin were hydrolysed at a significantly slower rate than lipoproteins from normal rats by the lipoprotein lipase component of PHP. However, if rats were fasted for 16 h prior to lipoprotein recovery, no differences in rates of VLDL hydrolysis were observed. Slower hydrolysis of lipoproteins of diabetic origin reflected a decrease in the apolipoprotein CII/CIII ratio and other changes in the apolipoprotein profile. To assess whether diabetic rats were less able to clear triacylglycerol independent of changes in the nature of the lipoproteins, we monitored the clearance of chylomicron-like lipid emulsions in hepatectomized rats. In vivo, emulsion triacylglycerol hydrolysis was not slowed due to diabetes. However, control and diabetic rats, which had been fasted for 16 h, cleared triacylglycerol at about twice the rate of fed rats. Triacylglycerol secretion rates in diabetic and control rats were similar, whether fed or fasted. We conclude that in streptozocin diabetic rats, hypertriglyceridemia was not due to overproduction of chylomicron- or VLDL-triacylglycerol, nor to decreased endothelial lipase activities. Rather, in fed diabetic rats, the triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins are poorer substrates for lipoprotein lipase. This may lead to slower formation of remnants which would exacerbate slow remnant removal. VLDL of diabetic origin were hydrolysed as efficiently as VLDL from control donors, suggesting that in the fed state the lipolytic defect may be specific for chylomicrons.  相似文献   

3.
The hydrolysis of chylomicrons enriched in long-chain n-3 fatty acids by cardiac lipoprotein lipase was studied. In 60 min, 24.8% of the triacylglycerol fatty acids were released as free fatty acids. The fatty acids were hydrolyzed at different rates. DHA (docosahexaenoic acid, 22:6n-3) and EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid, 20:5n-3) were released at rates significantly less than average. Stearic acid (18:0), 20:1n-9, and alpha-linolenic acid (18:3n-3) were released significantly faster than average. There was no relationship between the rate of release of a fatty acid and the number of carbons or the number of double bonds. Lipoprotein lipase selectively hydrolyzes the fatty acids of chylomicron triacylglycerols. This selectively will result in remnants that are relatively depleted in 18:0, 20:1, and 18:3 and relatively enriched in 20:5 and 22:6.  相似文献   

4.
The aim of this work was to characterise the lipid and fatty acid composition of chylomicron remnants enriched in n-3 or n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and to investigate their influence on the fatty acid profiles of the lipids of rat hepatocytes cultured in monolayers. Chylomicrons were prepared from the lymph collected from the thoracic duct of rats given an oral dose of fish or corn oil (high in n-3 and n-6 PUFA, respectively), and remnants were prepared in vitro from such chylomicrons using rat plasma containing lipoprotein lipase. The fatty acids predominating in the oils abounded also in their respective chylomicrons and remnants, especially in triacylglycerols. Chylomicrons as well as remnants contained small amounts of phospholipids and long-chain PUFA that were minor in, or absent from, the dietary oils, evidently provided by the intestinal epithelium. The incubation of hepatocytes for 6 h, with either n-3 or n-6 PUFA-rich remnants (0.25-0.75 mM triacylglycerol) resulted in a dose-dependent increase in the amount of triacylglycerols and phospholipids in the cells, which was not affected further by increasing the incubation time to 19 h. Whereas hepatocyte triacylglycerols mostly incorporated the PUFA predominating in each remnant type, the fatty acid profile of cell phospholipids was virtually unchanged. In addition, irrespective of whether they were enriched in n-3 or n-6 PUFA, remnants promoted a relative decrease in the amount of cholesteryl esters, a minor hepatocyte lipid class poor in PUFA. The results demonstrate that the hepatocyte fatty acid profile is modulated in a lipid-class specific way by the amount and type of dietary PUFA delivered to cells in chylomicron remnants.  相似文献   

5.
A systematic study was undertaken to observe the effects of dietary (dioleoyl) triacyl-sn-glycerol structure on chylomicron composition and metabolism. First studied was a series of 1,2-dioleoyl-3-(saturated)acyl-sn-glycerols, where the fatty acid esterified at the 3-position was varied from 14 to 24 carbons. Next a series of 1,3-dioleoyl-2-acyl glycerols was studied, with various fatty acids esterified at the glycerol 2-position. These stereospecific triacyl-sn-glycerols were fed to donor rats and lymph chylomicrons were isolated, analyzed, and reinjected into recipient rats to study their disappearance from plasma and delivery to tissues. As shown by their compositions, chylomicrons obtained after feeding triacylglycerols containing all sn-3 fatty acid of chain length greater than 20 carbons were under-represented, possibly due to poorer digestion by lipases, or poorer absorption by the intestine. The 18-carbon saturated chain fatty acid (stearic acid) was equally well represented in chylomicrons whether in the 2- or 3-position of the fed triacylglycerol. The presence of increased amounts of long-chain saturated fatty acids in donor chylomicron triacylglycerols affected the metabolism of chylomicrons injected into the bloodstream of recipient rats. In particular the rate of removal of labeled cholesteryl esters, tracing removal of the partially degraded chylomicron remnants was slowed by the saturated chains, with palmitic acid and the 20-carbon fatty acid, arachidic acid, showing the most severe effects. There were clear differences in the removal from plasma of injected lymph chylomicrons derived from fed triacylglycerols containing stearic acid in either the 2- or 3-position, with evidence for remnants from the symmetrical triacylglycerols being less rapidly removed from the circulating blood. This effect was investigated further by injected model emulsions of chylomicrons, where the 2-position was substituted with saturated or transunsaturated acyl chains. Quantitation of removal from the blood stream of these model lipoproteins confirmed that a saturated or transunsaturated long chain fatty acid at the 2-position of the emulsion triacylglycerols slowed remnant removal from the blood. In some cases, with both lymph chylomicron and with emulsions, the lipolytic step mediated by lipoprotein lipase was also slowed.  相似文献   

6.
A comparison was made between the effects of chylomicrons and chylomicron remnants on metabolic processes of isolated hepatocytes. Since isolated triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins are contaminated with nonesterified fatty acids, control incubations were conducted with an amount of fatty acid equivalent to the contaminating fatty acids present in the chylomicrons and the remnant preparations, respectively. Chylomicron remnants, produced in vitro by incubation of chylomicrons in postheparin rat plasma, caused marked inhibition of glycolysis, fatty acid synthesis, and cholesterol synthesis, along with marked stimulation of ketogenesis. These effects were traced to the release of nonesterified fatty acids from these remnant particles as a consequence of contamination with lipoprotein lipase, picked up by the particles during the incubation with rat plasma. Fatty acids inhibit glycolysis, cholesterol, and fatty acid synthesis, but enhance ketone body formation by isolated hepatocytes. Chylomicrons and remnants prepared in vivo by the injection of chylomicrons into functionally hepatectomized rats were not contaminated with lipoprotein lipase and did not inhibit glycolysis and cholesterol synthesis nor increase ketone body formation. These lipoprotein particles did, however, cause significant inhibition of fatty acid synthesis, with the chylomicrons being more effective on a protein basis than the remnants produced in vivo. The mechanism responsible for the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis by chylomicrons and remnants prepared in vivo remains to be resolved.  相似文献   

7.
Lipid emulsions were prepared with compositions similar to the triacylglycerol-rich plasma lipoproteins, but also incorporating added small amounts of monoacylglycerols. Control emulsions without monoacylglycerol were metabolized similarly to natural chylomicrons or very-low-density lipoproteins when injected intravenously in rats. The emulsion triacylglycerols and cholesteryl esters were both removed rapidly from the bloodstream, with the removal rates of triacylglycerols faster than those of cholesteryl esters. Much of the removed cholesteryl ester was found in the liver, but only a small fraction of the triacylglycerol, consistent with hepatic uptake of the triacylglycerol-depleted remnants of the injected emulsion. Emulsions incorporating added monooleoylglycerol or stearic acid were metabolized similarly. Added 1- or 2-monostearoylglycerol had no effect on triacylglycerol removal from plasma, but the removal rate of cholesteryl esters was decreased and less cholesteryl ester was found in the liver. These effects are similar to those recently described when emulsions and chylomicrons contained triacylglycerols with a saturated acyl chain at the glycerol 2-position, suggesting that saturated monoacylglycerol produced by the action of lipoprotein lipase may cause triacylglycerol-depleted remnant particles to remain in the plasma instead of being rapidly taken up by the liver.  相似文献   

8.
Isolated livers perfused with washed corn oil chylomicrons labeled in vivo with palmitic acid-1-(14)C removed a large proportion of the chylomicrons. Slices from these livers oxidized chylomicron fatty acid esters to both carbon dioxide and acetoacetate. The liver slices also generated free fatty acids from chylomicron lipids and converted chylomicron triglycerides to phospholipids. Similar activities were observed in rat liver slices prepared shortly after the intravenous administration of chylomicrons to intact rats. The observed chylomicron uptake and lipid conversions were similar in livers from both fed and fasted rats. Fasting increased the oxidation of chylomicron fatty acid esters by livers labeled in vivo and by perfusion. In livers removed from intact rats given labeled chylomicrons, the triglyceride-(14)C to phospholipid-(14)C ratio was high, a finding unexpected if the liver had acquired this (14)C by removal of circulating fatty acids formed by extrahepatic lipolysis. These results demonstrate the ability of the liver to remove and utilize chylomicrons directly and suggest that direct removal accounts for a significant portion of the chylomicron fatty acids utilized by the liver of intact rats.  相似文献   

9.
Studies have been conducted on the uptake and metabolism of unesterified oleic acid and lipoprotein triacylglycerol by the perfused rat heart, and of oleic acid, free glycerol and lipoprotein triacylglycerol by rat cardiac myocytes. The perfused heart efficiently extracted and metabolized unesterified fatty acid and the fatty acid released during lipolysis of the recirculating triacylglycerol. The released glyceride glycerol, however, was largely accumulated in the perfusion media. Cardiac myocytes also extracted and rapidly metabolized unesterified fatty acid. As with the intact heart, free glycerol was poorly utilized by cardiac myocytes. Although the cells appeared to extract a small amount of available extracellular triacylglycerol presented as very low density lipoprotein, this was shown to be unmetabolized, suggesting adsorption rather than surface lipolysis and uptake of the released fatty acid. The data suggest that myocytes are unable to metabolize triacylglycerol fatty acids without prior lipolysis by extracellular (capillary endothelial) lipoprotein lipase.  相似文献   

10.
Very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), labelled in vivo with [9,10-3H]oleate, was taken up rapidly by liver after injection in vivo. Initially, radioactive lipoprotein remnants in the VLDL density range were present in liver as a bound extracellular pool that could be released by perfusion with polyphosphate or heparin. The bound remnant showed a decrease in mean diameter and an increased proportion of cholesteryl ester as a function of time after injection. When VLDL of different mean diameters was injected, it was found that: (1) total uptake by liver was independent of diameter; (2) small VLDL was not taken up more rapidly than large VLDL; and (3) Large VLDL lost no more triacylglycerol before binding than did small VLDL and larger species of mean diameter greater than 40 nm were bound. It is concluded that there is no unique VLDL remnant taken up by liver in vivo. When livers were perfused after binding radioactive VLDL in vivo, the lipoprotein was metabolized, with the production of water-soluble products, and this metabolism was inhibited by chloroquine.  相似文献   

11.
Tri[14C]acylglycerol-labelled chylomicrons, obtained from cannulated mesenteric lymph of streptozotocin-diabetic donor rats, when intravenously injected into non-diabetic recipient rats, disappeared from the circulation at a significantly slower rate than similarly prepared tri[14C]acylglycerol chylomicrons from non-diabetic donor rats (t1/2, 5.6 +/- 0.7 vs. 3.2 +/- 0.5 min-1, P less than 0.02). The appearance of labelled lipolysis products among plasma lipids (free fatty acid, cholesterol ester and phospholipid fractions) was delayed, indicating decreased availability for lipolysis of the chylomicron-borne triacylglycerol of diabetic origin. Tissue distribution of triacylglycerol, 15 min after the injection of chylomicrons to recipient rats, disclosed a 4-5-fold increase in uptake by muscles (heart and diaphragm) in relation to adipose tissues (epididymal and perirenal sites), in the case of chylomicrons of diabetic derivation. Since a large share of the chylomicron triacylglycerol was taken up by the liver, this tissue was perfused with chylomicron 'remnants' prepared by partial in vitro lipolysis with purified lipoprotein lipase. The 'remnants' of diabetic derivation were taken up by the liver at a 2-3-fold slower rate than those of non-diabetic origin. Chylomicrons derived from diabetic rats were found to be similar in size but markedly depleted of E apolipoproteins as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focussing and a specific immunoassay. Decreases were also seen in A-I apolipoproteins by immunoassay and isoelectric focussing. Chylomicron 'remnants' were also markedly apolipoprotein E-deficient. In vitro incubation of the 'diabetic remnants' with high-density lipoproteins raised their apolipoprotein E content approx. 3-fold and considerably increased their hepatic uptake. Injection of intact chylomicrons preincubated with high-density lipoproteins likewise increased their in vivo removal rate toward the range of that of 'non-diabetic' chylomicrons. We conclude that diabetes-induced changes in the apolipoprotein composition of the chylomicrons and chylomicron remnants play an important role in their removal from the circulation. It appears that their recognition pattern is altered, reducing their ability to interact with receptor sites in the peripheral tissues and the liver, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
CaCo-2 cells, grown on filter membranes, were used to study the effects of fatty acids on cellular metabolism of triacylglycerol and phospholipids. The rate of triacylglycerol secretion was enhanced more than 2-fold, from 1 to 2 weeks after reaching confluency, in the presence of 0.6 mM fatty acids. Triacylglycerol secretion and oxidation of oleic acid increased 2- and 9-fold, respectively, with this culture system, as compared to cells grown on conventional plastic dishes. Eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5 n-3), when compared to oleic acid, did not reduce formation of triacylglycerol or enhance phospholipid synthesis in CaCo-2 cells during short term (less than 24 h) experiments, when the cells resided on membranes, regardless of what type of radioisotopes were used as precursors in the incubation media. However, the n-3 fatty acid was preferentially incorporated into phosphatidylinositol, lysophosphatidylcholine, and sphingomyelin, as compared to oleic acid. The disappearance from the apical medium and cellular uptake of labeled eicosapentaenoic and oleic acid were similar during incubations up to 24 h, and the metabolism of these fatty acids to acid-soluble materials and CO2 was equal. Light scattering analysis indicated that secreted lipoproteins of density less than 1.006 g/ml were in the same size-range as chylomicrons derived from human plasma. Assessment of secreted apolipoprotein B showed that by incubating CaCo-2 cells with oleic acid, apolipoprotein B levels increased approximately 1.4-fold when compared to cells incubated with eicosapentaenoic acid, whereas the amount of triacylglycerol and size-range of particles were similar for the two fatty acids. Our data indicate that CaCo-2 cells grown on filter membranes exhibit enterocyte-like characteristics with the ability to synthesize and secrete chylomicrons. Eicosapentaenoic acid and oleic acid are absorbed, metabolized, and influence secretion of lipoprotein particles in a similar way, except for some differences in incorporation of the fatty acids into certain phospholipid classes and a reduced secretion of apolipoprotein B. The culture conditions, including time after confluency and cellular support, are critical for the rate of secretion in the presence of eicosapentaenoic acid and oleic acid.  相似文献   

13.
The lipolysis of rat chylomicron polyenoic fatty acid esters with bovine milk lipoprotein lipase and human hepatic lipase was examined in vitro. Chylomicrons obtained after feeding fish oil or soy bean oil emulsions were used as substrates. The lipolysis was followed by gas chromatography or by using chylomicrons containing radioactive fatty acids. Lipoprotein lipase hydrolyzed eicosapentaenoic (20:5) and arachidonic acid (20:4) esters at a slower rate than the C14-C18 acid esters. More 20:5 and 20:4 thus accumulated in remaining tri- and diacylglycerols. Eicosatrienoic, docosatrienoic and docosahexanoic acids exhibited an intermediate lipolysis pattern. When added together with lipoprotein lipase, hepatic lipase increased the rate of lipolysis of 20:5 and 20:4 esters of both tri- and diacylglycerols. Addition of NaCl (final concentration 1 M) during the course of lipolysis inhibited lipoprotein lipase as well as the enhancing effect of hepatic lipase on triacylglycerol lipolysis. Hepatic lipase however, hydrolyzed diacylglycerol that had already been formed. Chylomicron 20:4 and 20:5 esters thus exhibit a relative resistance to lipoprotein lipase. It is suggested that the tri- and diacylglycerol species containing these fatty acids may accumulate at the surface of the remnant particles and act as substrate for hepatic lipase during a concerted action of this enzyme and lipoprotein lipase.  相似文献   

14.
This review illustrates how the use of several in vitro and in vivo techniques was necessary to show that the effect of insulin on hepatic triacylglycerol (TAG) secretion in the rat depends on the prior physiological state of the animal. The effect of insulin was always inhibitory when cultured cells were used, irrespective of the physiological state of the donor rats. By contrast, when perfused livers were used, insulin stimulated TAG secretion by livers isolated from fed, normoinsulinaemic rats, but inhibited it in livers from fasted or streptozotocin diabetic animals. This switch in insulin action was also shown to occur in vivo in experiments that involved the liver-specific targeting of both insulin (delivered within liposomes) and labelled fatty acids (delivered as cholesteryl esters within very-low-density lipoprotein remnants) in awake, unrestrained rats during a euglycaemic clamp. It is concluded that observations obtained with perfused liver preparations are more representative of the actual changes that occur in vivo with respect to the effects of insulin on hepatic TAG secretion.  相似文献   

15.
1. The work reported was designed to provide quantitative information about the capacity of the extrahepatic tissues of the rat to degrade injected VLD lipoproteins (very-low-density lipoproteins, d less than 1.006) to LD lipoproteins (low-density lipoproteins, d 1.006--1.063) and to study the fate of the different VLD-lipoprotein apoproteins during the degradative process. 2. Rat liver VLD lipoproteins, radioactively labelled in their protein moieties, were produced by the perfusion of the organ and were either injected into the circulation of the supradiaphragmatic rats or incubated in rat plasma at 37 degrees C. At a time (75 min) when approx. 90% of the triacylglycerol of the VLD lipoproteins had been hydrolysed the supradiaphragmatic rats were bled and VLD lipoproteins, LD lipoproteins and HD lipoproteins (high-density lipoproteins, d 1.063--1.21) were separated from their plasma and from the plasma incubated in vitro. The apoproteins of each of the lipoprotein classes were resolved by gel-filtration chromatography into three main fractions, designated peaks I, II and III. 3. Incubation of the liver VLD lipoproteins in plasma in vitro led to the transfer of about 30% of the total protein radioactivity to the HD lipoproteins. The transfer mainly involved the peak-II (arginine-rich and/or apo A-I) and peak-III (apo C) proteins. There was also a small transfer of radioactivity (about 5% of the total) to the LD lipoproteins. 4. Injection of the liver VLD lipoproteins into the circulation of the supradiaphragmatic rat resulted in the transfer of about 15% of the total VLD-lipoprotein radioactivity to the LD lipoproteins. The transfer involved mainly the peak-I (apo B) proteins and accounted for about 20% of the total apo B protein radioactivity of the injected VLD lipoproteins. When the endogenous plasma VLD lipoprotein was taken into account the transfer of apo B protein was about 35%. 5. The transfer of peak-II protein radioactivity from the VLD to the HD lipoproteins was greater in the plasma of the supradiaphragmatic rat than in the incubated plasma suggesting that there was a net transfer of peak-II apoproteins during the VLD lipoprotein degradation. The transfer of peak-III protein radioactivity was not greater in the plasma of the supradiaphragmatic rat, but there was a loss of this radioactivity from the circulation.  相似文献   

16.
To study potential effects of hepatic cholesterol concentration on secretion of very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) by the liver, male rats were fed on unsupplemented chow, chow with lovastatin (0.1%), or chow with lovastatin (0.1%) and cholesterol (0.1%) for 1 week. Livers were isolated from these animals and perfused in vitro, with a medium containing [2-14C]acetate, bovine serum albumin and glucose in Krebs-Henseleit buffer, and with an oleate-albumin complex. With lovastatin feeding, the hepatic concentrations of cholesteryl esters and triacylglycerols before perfusion were decreased, although free cholesterol was unchanged. However, hepatic secretion of all the VLDL lipids was decreased dramatically by treatment with lovastatin. Although total secretion of VLDL triacylglycerol, phospholipid, cholesterol and cholesteryl esters was decreased, the decrease in triacylglycerol was greater than that in free cholesterol or cholesteryl esters, resulting in secretion of a VLDL particle enriched in sterols relative to triacylglycerol. In separate studies, the uptake of VLDL by livers from control animals or animals treated with lovastatin was measured. Uptake of VLDL was estimated by disappearance of VLDL labelled with [1-14C]oleate in the triacylglycerol moiety, and was observed to be similar in both groups. During perfusion, triacylglycerol accumulated to a greater extent in livers from lovastatin-fed rats than in control animals. The depressed output of VLDL triacylglycerols and the increase in triacylglycerol in the livers from lovastatin-treated animals was indicative of a limitation in the rate of VLDL secretion. Addition of cholesterol (either free cholesterol or human low-density lipoprotein) to the medium perfusing livers from lovastatin-fed rats, or addition of cholesterol to the diet of lovastatin-fed rats, increased the hepatic concentration of cholesteryl esters and the output of VLDL lipids. The concentration of cholesteryl esters in the liver was correlated with the secretion of VLDL by the liver. These data suggest that cholesterol is an obligate component of the VLDL required for its secretion. It is additionally suggested that cholesteryl esters are in rapid equilibrium with a small pool of free cholesterol which comprises a putative metabolic pool available and necessary for the formation and secretion of the VLDL. Furthermore, the specific radioactivity (d.p.m./mumol) of the secreted VLDL free cholesterol was much greater than that of hepatic free cholesterol, suggesting that the putative hepatic metabolic pool is only a minor fraction of total hepatic free cholesterol.  相似文献   

17.
Emulsions with lipid compositions similar to the triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins were metabolized similarly to natural chylomicrons or very-low-density lipoproteins when injected intravenously in rats. Radioactive labels tracing the emulsion triacylglycerols and cholesteryl esters were both removed rapidly from the blood stream, but the removal rate of triacylglycerols was faster than that of cholesteryl ester. Most of the removed cholesteryl ester label was found in the liver, but only a small fraction of the triacylglycerol label was found in this organ, consistent with hepatic uptake of the remnants of the injected emulsion. Emulsions otherwise identical but excluding unesterified cholesterol were metabolized differently. The plasma removal of triacylglycerols remained fast, but the cholesteryl esters were removed very slowly. Heparin stimulated lipolysis, but failed to increase the rate of removal of cholesteryl esters from emulsions lacking cholesterol. Evidently, emulsions lacking cholesterol were acted on by the enzyme lipoprotein lipase, but the resultant triacylglycerol-depleted remnant particle remained in the plasma instead of being rapidly taken up by the liver. Therefore, the presence of emulsion cholesterol is a critical determinant of early metabolic events, and the findings point to a similar role for cholesterol in the natural triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins.  相似文献   

18.
Metabolism of protein-free lipid emulsion models of chylomicrons in rats   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Emulsions were prepared by ultrasonication of mixtures of triolein, cholesteryl oleate, phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol in aqueous dispersions, then purified by ultracentrifugation. After injection into rats, the metabolism of the artificial, protein-free emulsions was comparable to the metabolism of chylomicrons collected from rat intestinal lymph during the absorption of fat. Like chylomicrons, the emulsion triacylglycerol was removed from the plasma more quickly than emulsion cholesteryl ester. Also like chylomicrons, much more emulsion cholesteryl ester than triacylglycerol appeared in the liver 10 min after injection, and only trace amounts appeared in the spleen. Because the artificial emulsions gained apolipoproteins when incubated with plasma, their metabolism was probably facilitated by the recipient rat plasma apolipoproteins and so, in rats made apolipoprotein-deficient by treatment with estrogen, the removal of emulsions from the plasma was slowed. Removal was also slowed in hyperlipidemic rats fed a high-fat, high-cholesterol diet to expand the plasma pools of the triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins and remnants. The results indicate that the metabolism of lymph chylomicrons can be modeled by artificial, protein-free lipid emulsions not only in the initial partial hydrolysis by lipoprotein lipase, but also in the delivery of a remnant-like particle to the liver.  相似文献   

19.
The surface coat of chylomicrons: lipid chemistry   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Chylomicrons from the thoracic duct lymph of dogs fed corn oil were isolated by centrifugation and disrupted by either freezing and thawing or rotary evaporation and rehydration. A pellet, representing the surface coat, was isolated by centrifugation. Pellets isolated by freezing and thawing contained a higher percentage of saturated triglycerides than pellets isolated by rotary evaporation; the presence of saturated triglyceride in the pellet was probably an artifact of the preparation of the surface coat material at low temperature. Exchange of free cholesterol between surface and core lipid of chylomicrons was complete within 1 hr. The percentage of cholesterol in pellets of surface material isolated by freezing and thawing was about twice that found for pellets after rotary evaporation at 25-40 degrees C. Cholesteryl ester was not present in the surface lipid and that present in the core lipid did not exchange with serum lipoprotein cholesteryl ester. For phosphatidyl choline, the percentage of linoleic acid in lymph chylomicrons was markedly higher than that in clear lymph or plasma, while the percentage of arachidonic acid was lower. Sphingomyelin of lymph chylomicrons was characterized by very high levels of 16:0 and relatively small percentages of very long-chain fatty acids as compared with clear lymph or plasma. The data are consistent with the view that in lymph chylomicrons: (a) cholesteryl esters are dissolved in a core of triglycerides which contain fatty acids derived primarily from dietary fatty acids, (b) free cholesterol is partitioned between core and surface and is freely exchangeable between the two, (c) the phospholipid fractions are present on the surface and are intracellular in origin.  相似文献   

20.
Binding and uptake of rat chylomicrons of different metabolic stages by the hepatic low-density-lipoprotein (LDL) receptor were studied. Pure chylomicrons, characterized by apolipoprotein B-48 devoid of contaminating B-100, were labelled in their cholesteryl esters. Lymph chylomicrons and serum chylomicrons, enriched in apolipoprotein E and the C-apolipoproteins, bound poorly to rat hepatic membranes. In contrast, chylomicron remnants, containing the apolipoproteins B-48 and E, bound with high affinity. Specific binding of remnants was virtually completely competed for by LDL free of apolipoprotein E. In addition, in ligand blots both remnants and LDL associated with the same protein with an Mr characteristic of the LDL receptor. Uptake of remnants during a single pass through isolated perfused rat livers was decreased to about 50% by an excess of LDL. It is concluded that rat chylomicron remnants are a ligand of the hepatic LDL receptor. The much higher affinity as compared with LDL is mediated by apolipoprotein E but not B-48, and is inhibited by the C-apolipoproteins. This explains why serum chylomicrons are not taken up by the liver, whereas remnants are rapidly removed from the circulation. Results from experiments in vivo suggest that the LDL receptor makes an important contribution to the hepatic uptake of remnants and may be the principal binding site of the liver responsible for remnant removal.  相似文献   

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