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1.
Apolipoprotein E (apoE) on model triglyceride-rich particles (TGRP) increases triglyceride (TG) utilization and cholesteryl ester (CE) hydrolysis, independent of its effect on enhancing particle uptake. We questioned whether, under physiological concentrations, endogenously expressed apoE has similar effects on cellular lipid metabolism as compared to exogenous apoE. J774 macrophages, which do not express apoE, were engineered to express endogenous apoE by transfection of human apoE3 cDNA expression constructs (E(+)) or control vectors (E(-)) into the cells. To compare the effects of exogenous apoE and endogenous apoE on TGRP uptake, cells were incubated with or without apoE associated with (3)H-cholesteryl ether-labeled TGRP. Exogenous apoE enhanced TGRP uptake in both E(-) and E(+) cells. E(-) cells displayed significantly higher TGRP uptake than E(+) cells. Sodium chlorate, which inhibits cell proteoglycan synthesis, markedly diminished differences in TGRP uptake between E(-) and E(+) cells, suggesting that endogenous apoE-proteoglycan interaction contributes to differences in uptake between the two cell types. Particle uptake by the LDL receptor, by the LDL receptor related protein, or by scavenger receptors were similar between E(-) and E(+) cells indicating that endogenous apoE expression does not have a general effect on endocytic pathways. Exogenous apoE carried on TGRP stimulated TG utilization and CE hydrolysis in both cell types. However, TG utilization and CE hydrolysis were not affected by endogenous apoE expression. In conclusion, macrophage expression of apoE has very different effects on TGRP metabolism than exogenously supplied apoE. The fluorescence microscopy results in this study showing that exogenous apoE and endogenous apoE were confined in separate cellular compartments support the hypothesis that these differences resulted from distinct intracellular trafficking pathways followed by exogenous apoE bound to TGRP as compared to endogenous cell-expressed apoE.  相似文献   

2.
Although the direct conversion of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) into low density (LDL) and high density (HDL) lipoproteins only requires lipoprotein lipase (LPL) as a catalyst and albumin as the fatty acid acceptor, the in vitro-formed LDL and HDL differ chemically from their native counterparts. To investigate the reason(s) for these differences, VLDL were treated with human milk LPL in the presence of albumin, and the LPL-generated LDL1-, LDL2-, and HDL-like particles were characterized by lipid and apolipoprotein composition. Results showed that the removal of apolipoproteins B, C, and E from VLDL was proportional to the degree of triglyceride hydrolysis with LDL2 particles as the major and LDL1 and HDL + VHDL particles as the minor products of a complete in vitro lipolysis of VLDL. In comparison with native counterparts, the in vitro-formed LDL2 and HDL + VHDL were characterized by lower levels of triglyceride and cholesterol ester and higher levels of free cholesterol and lipid phosphorus. The characterization of lipoprotein particles present in the in vitro-produced LDL2 showed that, as in plasma LDL2, lipoprotein B (LP-B) was the major apolipoprotein B-containing lipoprotein accounting for over 90% of the total apolipoprotein B. Other, minor species of apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins included LP-B:C-I:E and LP-B:C-I:C-II:C-III. The lipid composition of in vitro-formed LP-B closely resembled that of plasma LP-B. The major parts of apolipoproteins C and E present in VLDL were released to HDL + VHDL as simple, cholesterol/phospholipid-rich lipoproteins including LP-C-I, LP-C-II, LP-C-III, and LP-E. However, some of these same simple lipoprotein particles were present after ultracentrifugation in the LDL2 density segment because of their hydrated density and/or because they formed, in the absence of naturally occurring acceptors (LP-A-I:A-II), weak associations with LP-B. Thus, the presence of varying amounts of these cholesterol/phospholipid-rich lipoproteins in the in vitro-formed LDL2 appears to be the main reason for their compositional difference from native LDL2. These results demonstrate that the formation of LP-B as the major apolipoprotein B-containing product of VLDL lipolysis only requires LPL as a catalyst and albumin as the fatty acid acceptor. However, under physiological circumstances, other modulating agents are necessary to prevent the accumulation and interaction of phospholipid/cholesterol-rich apolipoprotein C- and E-containing particles.  相似文献   

3.
Omega-3 (n − 3) fatty acids are emerging as bioactive agents protective against cardiovascular disease. However, their cellular delivery pathways are poorly defined. Here we questioned whether the uptake of n − 3 triglyceride-rich particles (TGRP) is mediated by cell surface proteoglycans (PG) using LDL receptor (LDLR)+/+ and LDLR−/− cell models. LDLR+/+ but not LDLR−/− cells showed higher n − 6 over n − 3 TGRP uptake. Removal of cell surface proteins and receptors by pronase markedly enhanced the uptake of n − 3 but not n − 6 TGRP. Lactoferrin blockage of apoE-mediated pathways decreased the uptake of n − 6 TGRP by up to 85% (p < 0.05) but had insignificant effect on n − 3 TGRP uptake. PG removal by sodium chlorate in LDLR+/+ cells substantially reduced n − 3 TGRP uptake but had little effect on n − 6 TGRP uptake. Thus, while n − 6 TGRP uptake is preferentially mediated by LDLR-dependent pathways, the uptake of n − 3 TGRP depends more on PG and non-LDLR cell surface anchoring.  相似文献   

4.
The uptake and internalization of a triglyceride emulsion by rat hepatocytes in culture less than 24 hr was either inhibited or uninfluenced by apoE. ApoE significantly increased the uptake of these emulsions in later cultures. Specific low density lipoprotein (LDL) binding was similar for hepatocyte monolayers prior to and after 24 hr. Rat hepatocytes in culture for 2 days, which were treated with collagenase, detached and then replated within 1 hr and were apoE-responsive in 2 hr. Heparin inhibited the apoE stimulation in both hepatocytes and hepatoma monolayers. Heparin wash of hepatocytes or hepatoma cells incubated with apoE-[14C]triolein emulsions at 4 degrees C resulted in a considerable loss in radiolabeled cell lipid. A similar wash after 37 degrees C incubations produced little loss suggesting internalization. Hepatocytes had lower affinity but similar apoE-emulsion binding capacity compared to hepatoma cells. Triolein emulsions with apoE were significantly more rapidly metabolized by the hepatocyte than unsupplemented emulsions. The apoE-mediated hepatocyte lipid uptake was inhibited by apoC proteins. High molar ratios of free fatty acid/albumin also suppressed hepatocyte apoE-mediated lipid uptake. Both rat high density lipoprotein (HDL) and LDL inhibited with a potency directly related to their content of apoE. Human LDL and HDL without apoE also inhibited the interaction with less potency than the rat lipoproteins. Human HDL inhibition was diminished after removal of apoC proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Hydrolysis and oxidation of LDL stimulate LDL entrapment in the arterial wall and promote inflammation and atherosclerosis via various mechanisms including lipoprotein fusion and lipid droplet formation. To determine the effects of FFA on these transitions, we hydrolyzed LDL by phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)), removed FFA by albumin, and analyzed structural stability of the modified lipoproteins. Earlier, we showed that heating induces LDL remodeling, rupture, and coalescence into lipid droplets resembling those found in atherosclerotic lesions. Here, we report how FFA affect these transitions. Circular dichroism showed that mild LDL lipolysis induces partial β-sheet unfolding in apolipoprotein B. Electron microscopy, turbidity, and differential scanning calorimetry showed that mild lipolysis promotes LDL coalescence into lipid droplets. FFA removal by albumin restores LDL stability but not the protein conformation. Consequently, FFA enhance LDL coalescence into lipid droplets. Similar effects of FFA were observed in minimally oxidized LDL, in LDL enriched with exogenous FFA, and in HDL and VLDL. Our results imply that FFA promote lipoprotein coalescence into lipid droplets and explain why LDL oxidation enhances such coalescence in vivo but hampers it in vitro. Such lipid droplet formation potentially contributes to the pro-atherogenic effects of FFA.  相似文献   

6.
It has recently been shown that macrophage proliferation occurs during the progression of atherosclerotic lesions and that oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL) stimulates macrophage growth. Possible mechanisms for this include the interaction of oxidized LDL with integral plasma membrane proteins coupled to signaling pathways, the release of growth factors and autocrine activation of growth factor receptors, or the potentiation of mitogenic signal transduction by a component of oxidized LDL after internalization. The present study was undertaken to further elucidate the mechanisms involved in the growth-stimulating effect of oxidized LDL in macrophages. Only extensively oxidized LDL caused significant growth stimulation, whereas mildly oxidized LDL, native LDL, and acetyl LDL were ineffective. LDL that had been methylated before oxidation (to block lysine derivatization by oxidation products and thereby prevent the formation of a scavenger receptor ligand) did not promote growth, even though extensive lipid peroxidation had occurred. The growth stimulation could not be attributed to lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC) because incubation of oxidized LDL with fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin resulted in a 97% decrease in lyso-PC content but only a 20% decrease in mitogenic activity. Similarly, treatment of acetyl LDL with phospholipase A2 converted more than 90% of the initial content of phosphatidylcholine (PC) to lyso-PC, but the phospholipase A2-treated acetyl LDL was nearly 10-fold less potent than oxidized LDL at stimulating growth. Platelet-activating factor receptor antagonists partly inhibited growth stimulation by oxidized LDL, but platelet-activating factor itself did not induce growth. Digestion of oxidized LDL with phospholipase A2 resulted in the hydrolysis of PC and oxidized PC but did not attenuate growth induction. Native LDL, treated with autoxidized arachidonic acid under conditions that caused extensive modification of lysine residues by lipid peroxidation products but did not result in oxidation of LDL lipids, was equal to oxidized LDL in potency at stimulating macrophage growth. Albumin modified by arachidonic acid peroxidation products also stimulated growth, demonstrating that LDL lipids are not essential for this effect. These findings suggest that oxidatively modified apolipoprotein B is the main growth-stimulating component of oxidized LDL, but that oxidized phospholipids may play a secondary role.  相似文献   

7.
Oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL) plays an important role in atherogenesis. It is generally thought that LDL is mainly oxidized in the intima of vessel walls, surrounded by hydrophilic antioxidants and proteins such as albumin. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible interrelationships between oxidation resistance of LDL and its protein and lipid moieties. Proteins and to a lesser extent lipids, appeared to be the major determinants in the LDL Cu2+-oxidation resistance, which in turn depend on the ultracentrifugation (UC) procedure used. Comparing high speed/short time (HS/ST, 4 h), high speed/long time (HS/LT, 6-16h) and low speed/long time (LS/LT, 24h) conditions of UC, HS with the shortest time (4h) led to prepare LDL (named LDL.HS-4 h) with higher total protein and triglyceride contents, unchanged total cholesterol, phospholipids and Vitamin E, and higher Cu2+-oxidation resistance. Among proteins, only albumin allows to explain changes. PAF acetyl hydrolase appeared to be unaffected, whereas its pro-oxidant role was established and found only in the absence of albumin. In contrast the pro-oxidant role of caeruloplasmin took place regardless of the albumin content of LDL. The antioxidant effect of albumin (the oxidation lag time was doubled for 20mol/mol albumin per LDL) is assumed to be due to its capacity at decreasing LDL affinity for Cu2+. Interestingly, the LDL.HS-4 h albumin content mirrored the intrinsic characteristics of LDL in the plasma and was not affected by added free albumin. Moreover, it has been verified that in 121 healthy subjects albumin was the best resistance predictor of the Cu2+-oxidation of LDL.HS-4 h, with a multiple regression equation: lag time (min) = 62.1 + 0.67(HSA/apoB) + 0.02(TG/apoB)-0.01(TC/apoB); r = 0.54, P < 0.0001. Accounted for by lag time, the oxidation resistance did not correlate with alpha-tocopherol and ubiquinol contents of LDL. The mean albumin content was about 10mol/mol, and highly variable (0-58 mol/mol) with subjects. The LDL.HS-4h may account for the status of LDL in its natural environment more adequately than LDL resulting from other conditions of UC.  相似文献   

8.
Poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) is an amphiphilic lipid that has been found to be a ubiquitous component of the cellular membranes of bacteria, plants and animals. The distribution of PHB in human plasma was investigated using chemical and immunological methods. PHB concentrations proved highly variable; in a random group of 24 blood donors, total plasma PHB ranged from 0.60 to 18.2 mg/l, with a mean of 3.5 mg/l. In plasma separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation, lipoproteins carried 20–30% of total plasma PHB; 6–14% in the very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), 8–16% in the low density lipoproteins (LDL), and < 3% in the high density lipoproteins (HDL). The majority of plasma PHB (70–80%) was found in protein fractions of density > 1.22 g/ml. Western blot analysis of the high density fractions with anti-PHB F(ab')2 identified albumin as the major PHB-binding protein. The affinity of albumin for PHB was confirmed by in vitro studies which demonstrated transfer of 14C-PHB from chloroform into aqueous solutions of human and bovine serum albumins. PHB was less tightly bound to LDL than to other plasma components; the polymer could be isolated from LDL by extraction with chloroform, or by digestion with alkaline hypochlorite, but it could not similarly be recovered from VLDL or albumin. PHB in the LDL correlated positively with total plasma cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, and negatively with HDL cholesterol. The wide concentration range of PHB in plasma, its presence in VLDL and LDL and absence in HDL, coupled with its physical properties, suggest it may have important physiological effects.  相似文献   

9.
Low density lipoproteins (LDL) bound to the surface of Schistosoma mansoni may protect the parasite from assault by the immune system and provide essential lipids for the parasite in human schistosomiasis. Here we have characterized the LDL binding sites on the surface of schistosomula by comparing the binding of fluorescently labeled LDL to the parasite with LDL binding proteins as seen by ligand blotting before and after enzymatic treatment of viable parasites. Ligand blotting revealed two LDL binding bands, 17.8 +/- 0.8 and 15.7 +/- 0.6 kDa, in intact schistosomula. Trypsinization eliminated all of the specific and approximately two-thirds of the total LDL binding capacity of schistosomula in a time and concentration-dependent manner. LDL did not bind to any bands on blots of trypsinized, viable worms. Specific LDL binding was also eliminated by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PIPLC). PIPLC treatment removed both LDL binding bands from the worms and caused the appearance of an LDL binding band, 16.6 +/- 0.3 kDa, in the culture medium. LDL binding to the parasite recovered within 24 to 48 h after trypsinization but the recovery was inhibited by either monensin or puromycin. Both LDL binding bands reappeared in ligand blots of cultured worms within 24 h; the reappearance was blocked by puromycin but not by monensin. These studies suggest that the specific binding of human LDL to schistosomula is mediated by GPI-linked low molecular weight proteins that are continually synthesized and transported to the parasite surface.  相似文献   

10.
Macrophages isolated from a variety of organs in several animal species exhibit high affinity binding sites that recognize chemically modified proteins. One of these binding sites recognizes human plasma low density lipoprotein (LDL) in which the positive charges on the epsilon-amino groups of lysine have been removed or neutralized by chemical modification, thus giving the protein an enhanced negative charge. Effective treatments include reaction of LDL with organic acid anhydrides (acetylation or maleylation) and reaction with aldehydes, such as treatment with malondialdehyde. After the negatively-charged LDL binds to the surface receptor sites, it is rapidly internalized by the macrophages by endocytosis and hydrolyzed in lysosomes. The liberated cholesterol is reesterified in the cytoplasm, producing massive cholesteryl ester deposition. The binding site for negatively-charged LDL has been demonstrated so far only on macrophages and other scavenger cells. It is not expressed in cultured fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, lymphocytes, or adrenal cells. In addition to its affinity for acetylated LDL and malondialdehyde-treated LDL, the macrophage site binds a variety of polyanions. It exhibits a particularly high affinity for certain sulfated polysaccharides (dextran sulfate and fucoidin), certain polynucleotides (polyinosinic acid and polyguanylic acid), polyvinyl sulfate, and maleylated albumin. It is possible that the site that binds negatively-charged LDL may be responsible for the massive accumulation of cholesteryl esters that occurs in vivo in macrophages and other scavenger cells in patients with high levels of circulating plasma LDL.  相似文献   

11.
We previously showed that immunization of guinea pigs with reductively glucosylated guinea pig low density lipoprotein (LDL) or albumin resulted in the formation of antibodies specific for the glucosylated protein. The present studies were done to determine if modifications of homologous LDL or albumin, other than addition of carbohydrate, would also render these proteins immunogenic. We found that derivatization of lysine residues of guinea pig LDL or albumin by carbamylation, acetylation, ethylation, or even methylation rendered them immunogenic in guinea pigs. In addition, the specificity of the antibodies was strikingly influenced by whether modified homologous LDL or modified homologous albumin was used as the immunogen. Antibodies generated against modified LDL were directed almost exclusively against the derivatized lysine residues (i.e., carbamyllysine, acetyllysine, or methyllysine) and hence reacted equivalently with other modified proteins that contained the same lysine derivative. However, antibodies generated against guinea pig albumin (or fibrinogen) modified in the same ways reacted primarily with the modified protein used as immunogen, and not with the free lysine derivative, or with other similarly modified proteins. Each of the modifications referred to above could potentially occur in vivo. Therefore, the findings presented may be relevant to autoantibody formation and immunopathogenetic mechanisms in certain diseases.  相似文献   

12.
The conformation of the apolipoprotein B-100 associated with low density lipoproteins (LDL) is not fixed. Rather, the conformations of several regions are subject to alteration by a variety of metabolic and therapeutic perturbations that change either the lipid compositions and/or sizes of LDL particles. However, because these perturbations simultaneously alter several structural-compositional features of the particles it has been difficult to relate structural-compositional features of LDL to apoB-100 conformations. Furthermore, in in vivo studies several days pass between samplings, thus different sets of particles are studied before and after experimental perturbation. In the present experiments more discrete perturbations of LDL were obtained in vitro by incubating LDL with very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) in the presence of partially purified human plasma lipid transfer proteins. The conformations of apoB on the LDL particles then were examined a) by probing epitope expression and b) by examining interactions between LDL and LDL-receptors in cultured human fibroblasts. During incubations with VLDL and lipid transfer proteins, the diameters of LDL particles decreased; the percentage composition of LDL triglycerides increased three-to fivefold; concomitantly, cholesteryl esters decreased. Lipid transfer protein was required for the transfer to occur and the magnitude of the increase in LDL-triglycerides depended upon the duration of incubation, the ratio of VLDL/LDL, and unknown properties specific to the various LDL preparations. The fact that the triglyceride contents of all LDL preparations were not identically affected suggests that initial packaging of the core region may affect capacity for lipid exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of facilitated lipid transfer by insect or mammalian plasma lipid transfer proteins has not been elucidated. Transfer catalysts may act as carriers of lipid between donor and acceptor lipoproteins or, alternatively, transfer may require formation of a ternary complex. This study was designed to determine if Manduca sexta hemolymph lipid transfer particle (LTP) can facilitate net vectorial transfer of lipid without concomitant contact between donor and acceptor lipoproteins and LTP. M. sexta [3H]diacylglycerol-high density lipophorin-larval ([3H]DAG-HDLp-L) and human low density lipoprotein (LDL) were covalently bound to Sepharose matrices and packed into separate columns. In incubations lacking LTP, greater than 98% of the recovered DAG remained associated with HDLp-L. An unrelated hemolymph storage protein, arylphorin, was unable to catalyze the transfer of DAG between solid-phase lipoproteins. Facilitated transfer of DAG from HDLp-L to LDL was observed when LTP was circulated between the columns. Under these conditions, facilitated transfer occurred at a rate of 2.24 ng of DAG/h (versus 0.16 microgram of DAG/h in the control), and after 16 h greater than 26% of recovered labeled DAG was transferred to LDL. This corresponds to a 14-fold rate enhancement induced by LTP. The LTP-specific transfer of DAG between physically separated lipoproteins demonstrates the ability of LTP to facilitate net lipid transfer via a carrier-mediated mechanism in the absence of a ternary complex involving donor, acceptor, and catalyst. In experiments aimed at assessing the relative contribution of ternary complex formation to DAG transfer, acceptor LDL was circulated with HDLp-L remaining immobilized. Under these conditions, LTP induced a 13-fold rate enhancement from 1.3 to 16.3 micrograms of DAG/h. The similar rate enhancements observed with both lipoproteins bound and only donor bound suggest the overall contribution of ternary complex formation to facilitated lipid transfer is insignificant. The described system should prove useful in mechanistic studies of other transfer proteins as well as studies of transfer of other lipids.  相似文献   

14.
In the course of lipolysis, surface lipid products may accumulate on very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL). To investigate potential lipoprotein interactions mediated by such products, radiolabeled low-density lipoproteins (LDL) were incubated with VLDL and bovine milk lipoprotein lipase in the presence of limited free fatty acid acceptor. With partial VLDL degradation, association of radiolabeled LDL with VLDL remnants or larger aggregates of VLDL density was demonstrated by gradient gel electrophoresis, agarose chromatography, and density gradient ultracentrifugation. VLDL-LDL complex formation was also observed in incubations with lipid extracts from lipolyzed VLDL or with purified palmitic acid in the absence of lipolysis. Complex formation was inhibited by addition of increasing amounts of albumin as free fatty acid acceptor, but could be detected at molar ratios of free fatty acids/albumin that occur in vivo. Composition analysis of LDL reisolated following incubation with VLDL and lipase under conditions favoring partial complex formation revealed enrichment in glycerides and depletion of cholesterol. We conclude that lipolysis products can promote the formation of stable complexes of LDL and VLDL, and that physical interactions of this nature may play a role in the transfer of lipids and apolipoproteins between lipoprotein particles.  相似文献   

15.
Previously, we isolated and characterized unique liposomal-like, cholesterol-rich lipid particles that accumulate in human atherosclerotic lesions. Human plasma low density lipoprotein (LDL) has a molar ratio of total cholesterol to phospholipid (3:1) similar to that of this lesion cholesterol-rich lipid particle. However, LDL is enriched in cholesteryl ester while the lesion lipid particle is enriched in unesterified cholesterol. To examine a possible precursor-product relationship between LDL and the lesion lipid particle, we hydrolyzed the cholesteryl ester core of LDL with cholesterol esterase. Cholesteryl ester hydrolysis occurred only after LDL was treated with trypsin. Trypsin pretreatment was not required for cholesteryl ester hydrolysis of LDL oxidized with copper, a treatment that also degrades apolipoprotein B, the major protein moiety in LDL. In contrast to greater than 90% hydrolysis of cholesteryl ester in trypsin-cholesterol esterase-treated or copper-oxidized LDL, there was only 18% hydrolysis of cholesteryl ester in similarly treated high density lipoprotein. With a limited 10-min hydrolysis of LDL cholesteryl ester, LDL-sized particles and newly formed larger flattened films or discs were present. With complete hydrolysis of LDL cholesteryl ester, LDL particles converted to complex multilamellar, liposomal-like, structures with sizes approximately five times larger than native LDL. These liposomal-like particles derived from LDL were chemically and structurally similar to unesterified cholesterol-rich lipid particles that accumulate in atherosclerotic lesions.  相似文献   

16.
The lipid substrate specificity of Manduca sexta lipid transfer particle (LTP) was examined in in vitro lipid transfer assays employing high density lipophorin and human low density lipoprotein (LDL) as donor/acceptor substrates. Unesterified cholesterol was found to exchange spontaneously between these substrate lipoproteins, and the extent of transfer/exchange was not affected by LTP. By contrast, transfer of labeled phosphatidylcholine and cholesteryl ester was dependent on LTP in a concentration-dependent manner. Facilitated phosphatidylcholine transfer occurred at a faster rate than facilitated cholesteryl ester transfer; this observation suggests that either LTP may have an inherent preference for polar lipids or the accessibility of specific lipids in the donor substrate particle influences their rate of transfer. The capacity of LDL to accept exogenous lipid from lipophorin was investigated by increasing the high density lipophorin:LDL ratio in transfer assays. At a 3:1 (protein) ratio in the presence of LTP, LDL became turbid (and aggregated LDL were observed by electron microscopy) indicating LDL has a finite capacity to accept exogenous lipid while maintaining an overall stable structure. When either isolated human non B very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) apoproteins or insect apolipophorin III (apoLp-III) were included in transfer experiments, the sample did not become turbid although lipid transfer proceeded to the same extent as in the absence of added apolipoprotein. The reduction in sample turbidity caused by exogenous apolipoprotein occurred in a concentration-dependent manner, suggesting that these proteins associate with the surface of LDL and stabilize the increment of lipid/water interface created by LTP-mediated net lipid transfer. The association of apolipoprotein with the surface of modified LDL was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis, and scanning densitometry revealed that apoLp-III bound to the surface of LDL in a 1:14 apoB:apoLp-III molar ratio. Electron microscopy showed that apoLp-III-stabilized modified LDL particles have a larger diameter (29.2 +/- 2.6 nm) than that of control LDL (22.7 +/- 1.9 nm), consistent with the observed changes in particle density, lipid, and apolipoprotein content. Thus LTP-catalyzed vectorial lipid transfer can be used to introduce significant modifications into isolated LDL particles and provides a novel mechanism whereby VLDL-LDL interrelationships can be studied.  相似文献   

17.
High density lipoproteins (HDL) were isolated by a procedure employing polyanion precipitation and column chromatography. The product was free of low density lipoproteins (LDL) but serum albumin (HSA) was still present. The remaining HSA was removed by an immuno-adsorbent column. The HDL isolated by our method was compared to another HDL preparation isolated from the same plasma sample by the combination of ultra centrifugation and gel chromatography.1 It was found to have approximately the same lipid and protein composition as the HDL isolated by conventional techniques.1 Minor differences included a higher phospholipid and apoprotein E content and lower triglyceride and ApoC II content of the HDL isolated by column chromatography. The method described here is considerably less tedious than earlier techniques, can be scaled up without substantial increase in labor and results in an approximately 30% higher yield than the method described by Rudel et al.1  相似文献   

18.
Oxidized low density lipoprotein (LDL) plays an important role in atherogenesis. It is generally thought that LDL is mainly oxidized in the intima of vessel walls, surrounded by hydrophilic antioxidants and proteins such as albumin. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible interrelationships between oxidation resistance of LDL and its protein and lipid moieties. Proteins and to a lesser extent lipids, appeared to be the major determinants in the LDL Cu 2+ -oxidation resistance, which in turn depend on the ultracentrifugation (UC) procedure used. Comparing high speed/short time (HS/ST, 4 &#117 h), high speed/long time (HS/LT, 6-16 &#117 h) and low speed/long time (LS/LT, 24 &#117 h) conditions of UC, HS with the shortest time (4 &#117 h) led to prepare LDL (named LDL·HS-4 &#117 h) with higher total protein and triglyceride contents, unchanged total cholesterol, phospholipids and Vitamin E, and higher Cu 2+ -oxidation resistance. Among proteins, only albumin allows to explain changes. PAF acetyl hydrolase appeared to be unaffected, whereas its pro-oxidant role was established and found only in the absence of albumin. In contrast the pro-oxidant role of caeruloplasmin took place regardless of the albumin content of LDL. The antioxidant effect of albumin (the oxidation lag time was doubled for 20 &#117 mol/mol albumin per LDL) is assumed to be due to its capacity at decreasing LDL affinity for Cu 2+ . Interestingly, the LDL·HS-4 &#117 h albumin content mirrored the intrinsic characteristics of LDL in the plasma and was not affected by added free albumin. Moreover, it has been verified that in 121 healthy subjects albumin was the best resistance predictor of the Cu 2+ -oxidation of LDL·HS-4 &#117 h, with a multiple regression equation: lag time (min)=62.1+0.67(HSA/apoB)+0.02 (TG/apoB) &#109 0.01(TC/apoB); r =0.54, P <0.0001. Accounted for by lag time, the oxidation resistance did not correlate with &#102 -tocopherol and ubiquinol contents of LDL. The mean albumin content was about 10 &#117 mol/mol, and highly variable (0-58 &#117 mol/mol) with subjects. The LDL·HS-4 &#117 h may account for the status of LDL in its natural environment more adequately than LDL resulting from other conditions of UC.  相似文献   

19.
Low density lipoprotein is a heterogeneous group of lipoproteins that differs in lipid and protein composition. One copy of apolipoprotein (apo)B accounts for over 95% of the LDL protein, but the presence of minor proteins could disturb its biological behavior. Our aim was to study the content of minor proteins in LDL subfractions separated by anion exchange chromatography. Electropositive LDL [LDL(+)] is the native form, whereas electronegative LDL [LDL(−)] is a minor atherogenic fraction present in blood. LC-ESI MS/MS analysis of both LDL fractions identified up to 28 different proteins. Of these, 13 proteins, including apoB, were detected in all the analyzed samples. LDL(−) showed a higher content of most minor proteins. Statistical analysis of proteomic data indicated that the content of apoE, apoA-I, apoC-III, apoA-II, apoD, apoF, and apoJ was higher in LDL(−) than in LDL(+). Immunoturbidimetry, ELISA, or Western blot analysis confirmed these differences. ApoJ and apoF presented the highest difference between LDL(+) and LDL(−) (>15-fold). In summary, the increased content of several apolipoproteins, and specifically of apoF and apoJ, could be related to the physicochemical characteristics of LDL(−), such as apoB misfolding, aggregation, and abnormal lipid composition.  相似文献   

20.
Endothelial cell (EC) cultures of different, selected vascular beds and/or organs were screened for receptor-mediated transport of proteins with a semipermeable filter assay. In SVEC4-10 cells, a mouse lymphoid endothelial cell line, orosomucoid, albumin, insulin and LDL were transcytosed from the apical (luminal) to basal (abluminal) side by a receptor-mediated pathway. Specific LDL transcytosis involved transport of intact LDL. A pathway of degradation of LDL and basal release involved vesicles in transport to lysosomes and amino acid merocrine secretion. This newly described transcellular passage of LDL via lysosomes, as well as the standard pathway, were reduced to 70% by PEG(50)-cholesterol (PEG-Chol). Combined results of temperature-dependence analysis and PEG(50)-cholesterol sensitivity show that two pathways contribute to general LDL transcellular passage. We suggest a mechanism of domain hopping by protein membrane diffusion of receptors as the pathway for intact LDL delivery. Based on theoretical considerations we propose that active transport by protein membrane diffusion can be facilitated by an organizational structure of lipid microdomains and polar cellular organization.  相似文献   

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