首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Lipid transport in the hemolymph of Manduca sexta is facilitated by a high density lipophorin in the resting adult insect (HDLp-A, d approximately 1.109 g/ml) and by a low density lipophorin during flight (LDLp, d approximately 1.060 g/ml). Lipophorin presumably shuttles different lipids between sites of uptake or storage, and sites of utilization. In order to shuttle lipid, a lipid-depleted lipophorin should be able to reload with lipid. To test this hypothesis, we used HDLp-A particles that were artificially depleted of either phospholipid (d approximately 1.118 g/ml) or diacylglycerol (d approximately 1.187 g/ml) and subsequently radiolabeled in their protein moiety. Upon injection into adult moths, both particles shifted their density to that of native HDLp-A, indicating lipid loading. Also, upon subsequent injection of adipokinetic hormone, both particles shifted to a lower density (d approximately 1.060 g/ml) indicating diacylglycerol loading and conversion to LDLp. Both phospholipid and diacylglycerol loading were also studied using an in vitro system. The lipid-depleted particles were incubated with fat body that had been radiolabeled in either the phospholipid or the triacylglycerol fraction. Transfer of radiolabeled phospholipid and diacylglycerol from fat body to lipophorin was observed. During diacylglycerol loading, apoLp-III associated with lipophorin, whereas phospholipid loading occurred in the absence of apoLp-III. The results show the ability of lipid-depleted lipophorins to reload with lipid and therefore reaffirm the role of lipophorin as a reusable lipid shuttle.  相似文献   

2.
Role of lipophorin in lipid transport to the insect egg   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Lipid accounts for 40% of the dry weight of a mature Manduca sexta egg. Less than 1% of the total egg lipid is derived from de novo synthesis by the follicles. The remaining egg lipid originates in the fat body and is transported to the ovary by lipoproteins. Vitellogenin, the major egg yolk lipoprotein, accounts for 5% of the total egg lipid. The remaining 95% lipid is attributable to the hemolymph lipophorins, adult high density lipophorin (HDLp-A) and low density lipophorin (LDLp). When HDLp-A that is dual labeled with 3H in the diacylglycerol fraction and 35S in the protein moiety is incubated with follicles in vitro, the ratio of 3H:35S in the incubation medium does not vary and is similar to the ratio of the labels that are associated with the follicles. In an accompanying paper (Kawooya, J. K., Osir, E. O., and Law, J. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8740-8747), we show that HDLp-A is sequestered by the follicles without subsequent hydrolysis of its apoproteins. These results, together with those presented in this paper, support our conclusion that HDLp-A is not recycled back into the hemolymph after it is internalized by the follicles and, therefore, does not function as a reusable lipid shuttle between the fat body and the ovary. When follicles are incubated with dual labeled LDLp, the diacylglycerol component of the particle is internalized by the follicles without concomitant endocytosis of its associated apoproteins. This LDLp particle is the major vehicle by which lipid is delivered to the ovary.  相似文献   

3.
The egg of Manduca sexta contains a very high density lipophorin (VHDLp-E; Mr approximately equal to 4.14 x 10(5), rho = 1.238 g/ml) that is derived from the high density lipophorin (HDLp-A; Mr approximately equal to 7.63 x 10(5), rho = 1.076 g/ml) of the hemolymph. The selective uptake of HDLp-A into the egg and its subsequent conversion to VHDLp-E was studied both in vivo and in vitro. Upon entering the egg, an estimated 530 mol of lipid were stripped from each mol of HDLp-A, and 68% of the diacylglycerol fraction was converted to triacylglycerol. In addition, the two molecules of the low molecular weight apolipoprotein, apolipophorin-III, of HDLp-A were dissociated from the lipophorin particle. The VHDLp-E thus formed consisted of 80% protein and 20% lipid, 75% of which was phospholipid. HDLp-A labeled in vivo with [35S]methionine in its apoprotein moiety was injected into females at the onset of egg development, and its incorporation in a series of follicles at different stages of growth was measured. There was increased accumulation of [35S]HDLp-A in the follicles as they matured. The apoproteins of [35S]HDLp-A were not hydrolyzed when the particle was internalized by the follicle. In the accompanying paper we have presented the evidence that the apoproteins of HDLp-A are retained in the follicles (Kawooya, J.K., and Law, J.H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8748-8753).  相似文献   

4.
During the transition from the last feeding larval stage to the pupal stage of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, significant changes occur in the properties of lipophorin, the major hemolymph lipoprotein. Within the first 24 h after cessation of feeding, the larval lipophorin (HDLp-L) is first converted to a higher density form (HDLp-W2) and then HDLp-W2 is converted to a lower density form (HDLp-W1). HDLp-W1 remains in the hemolymph until pupation, when another form, HDLp-P, with a density between HDLp-W1 and HDLp-L, is present. Although all the lipophorins contain identical apoproteins, they differ in lipid content and composition; the differences in density being primarily related to diacylglycerol content. The conversion of HDLp-L to HDLp-W1 is accompanied by a loss of hydrocarbon and uptake of carotenes. These latter changes in lipophorin composition reflect alterations in cuticular lipid composition. HDLp-L was radiolabeled in the apoproteins by injecting animals with 3H-amino acids early in the last larval stage. Subsequently HDLp-L was isolated at the end of the larval stage, HDLp-W2 and HDLp-W1 were isolated during the wandering stage, and HDLp-P was isolated after pupation. The specific activity of the apoproteins in the four lipophorins was not significantly different, suggesting that the observed alterations in lipophorin properties do not require synthesis of new apoproteins but result from retailoring the lipid composition of preexisting molecules. Examination of the hemolymph of individual animals during these transitions showed that only one species of lipoprotein was present, never a mixture of two or more species. These observations suggest that the lipoprotein conversions are precisely timed and that lipoprotein metabolism during larval development and pupation cannot be considered a static process. The unique finding of these studies was that synthesis of lipophorin apoproteins proceeds actively during the first part of the fifth instar but then ceases and does not recommence during the wandering or early pupal stages.  相似文献   

5.
The role of Manduca sexta lipid transfer particle (LTP) in the transport of lipid from fat body to lipophorin was investigated in vitro. Fat body that contained radiolabeled lipid was incubated with either high density lipophorin or low density lipophorin, and it was shown that lipid was transferred from fat body to lipophorins. The transfer of diacylglycerol was blocked by preincubating fat body with LTP antibody. Furthermore, transfer was restored by the addition of LTP, indicating that LTP promotes the transfer of lipid from fat body to lipophorins. Using lipophorins radio-labeled in their lipid moiety, transfer of lipid from lipophorin to fat body was demonstrated. This transfer was not mediated by LTP. The adipokinetic hormone induced diacylglycerol mobilization from the fat body and the concomitant interconversion of high density lipophorin to low density lipophorin were performed in vitro and were shown to require the presence of LTP.  相似文献   

6.
Lipophorin structure analyzed by in vitro treatment with lipases.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Adult Manduca sexta high density lipophorin (HDLp-A) is composed of three apolipoproteins (apoLp-I, -II, and -III) and 52% lipid. The flight-specific low density lipophorin (LDLp) contains 62% lipid and is associated with several additional molecules of apoLp-III. The amount of phospholipid remains constant in lipophorin (140 mol/mol of lipophorin), while the diacylglycerol content varies between different lipophorin species (310 mol/mol HDLp up to 1160 mol/mol LDLp). Both lipophorin particles were enzymatically depleted of phospholipid or diacylglycerol by in vitro incubation with either phospholipase A2 or triacylglycerol lipase. Albumin was used to remove free fatty acids generated during the reaction. Treatment with phospholipase A2 removed all phospholipids (except sphingomyelin) and the resulting particles were stable. Triacylglycerol lipase hydrolyzed large fractions of diacylglycerol. The resulting particles were smaller in size, higher in density, and devoid of apoLp-III. The particles retained apoLp-I and -II and the other lipid components, including a substantial amount of diacylglycerol. Structural integrity of diacylglycerol-depleted lipophorin was confirmed by electron microscopical analysis. When treated with both phospholipase A2 and triacylglycerol lipase, lipophorin precipitated. From these results we conclude that: 1) all phospholipid and apoLp-III are located at the surface of lipophorin, whereas diacylglycerol is partitioned between the sublayers and the surface of the particle; 2) both diacylglycerol and phospholipid play a role in stabilizing lipophorin in the aqueous medium; and 3) lipophorin can be extensively unloaded and still retain its basic structure, a necessary feature for its function as a reusable lipid shuttle.  相似文献   

7.
The density of lipophorin was determined in adult females of Rhodnius prolixus on different days after a meal. Several populations of lipophorins, differing in density but always in the range of HDL, were found in the hemolymph. The density of the major population was analyzed and a complex profile of density variation was found associated with the principal metabolic events in these insects digestion and oogenesis. During the initial three days after the blood meal, with the onset of the digestive process, the density of lipophorin decreased from 1.1185 g/l to 1.1095 g/l, associated with the transfer of lipids from midgut to the lipophorin particles. During the period of intense vitellogenesis and lipid uptake by the ovary, the lipophorin density started to increase and reached the value, 1.1322 g/l, and remained stable up to the end of oogenesis. As soon as the requirement of lipids to build up the oocytes ceased, the density of lipophorin decreased to its initial value associated with the transfer of lipids from fat body to lipophorin. Soon after the blood meal the midgut was the main source of lipids capable of replenishing the lipophorin particles, while the fat body assumed this function during the succeeding days and reached its maximum capacity around day 10, as estimated by the rate of lipid transfer. The principal lipids transferred were phospholipids and diacylglycerols. Except in the protein/lipid ratio no major changes were observed among different lipids isolated from lipophoin of different densities. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 35:301-313, 1997.© 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Sustained flight in the moth, Manduca sexta, necessitates lipid mobilization and transport to flight muscle, a process mediated by the adipokinetic hormone. An adult specific high density lipophorin (lipoprotein, HDLp-A, Mr = 7.68 X 10(5)) accepts diacylglycerol from the fat body, increasing in size and decreasing in density, to give a low density lipophorin (lipoprotein, LDLp, Mr = 1.56 X 10(6)). During this process, several molecules of the small apolipoprotein, apolipophorin III (apoLp-III), are added to the two molecules originally present in HDLp-A. A study of the time course of adipokinetic hormone-induced loading of diacylglycerol onto HDLp-A, using the analytical ultracentrifuge and gel filtration, suggests that a lipoprotein of density intermediate between HDLp-A and LDLp was formed transiently. Analysis of lipoproteins separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation in the course of the loading process indicates that apoLp-III is added more rapidly than diacylglycerol and that it changes its conformation on the surface as more diacylglycerol is added. Taken together with the known properties of apoLp-III, a prolate ellipsoid with an axial ratio of 3, we suggest that initially apoLp-III adds to the expanded hydrophobic surface of the lipoprotein with its short axis parallel to the surface and that apoLp-III subsequently unfolds to cover a greater area of hydrophobic surface. Exchange experiments with labeled apoLp-III showed that the two apoLp-III molecules in HDLp-A do not exchange with free apoLp-III, even when the lipoprotein passed through a loading and unloading cycle, suggesting a structural role for apoLp-III in HDLp-A.  相似文献   

9.
In this study we report the purification and characterization of a lipid transfer particle (LTP) from Rhodnius prolixus hemolymph, and its participation in phospholipid and diacylglycerol transfer processes. (3)H-diacylglycerol labeled low density lipophorin from Manduca sexta ((3)H-LDLp) was incubated with R. prolixus lipophorin (Lp) in the presence of Rhodnius hemolymph. Following incubation and isolation, both lipoproteins showed equivalent amounts of (3)H-labeled lipids. Hemolymph was subjected to KBr gradient ultracentrifugation. SDS-PAGE analysis of gradient fractions showed the enrichment of bands with molecular masses similar to the M. sexta LTP standard. LTP containing fractions were assayed and lipid transfer activity was observed. Purification of LTP was accomplished by (i) KBr density gradient ultracentrifugation, (ii) size exclusion, (iii) Cu(++) affinity and (iv) ion exchange chromatographies. LTP molecular mass was estimated approximately 770 kDa, comprising three apoproteins, apoLTP-I (315 kDa), apoLTP-II (85 kDa) and apoLTP-III (58 kDa). Phospolipid content of (32)P-LTP was determined after two-dimensional TLC. (32)P-phospholipid-labeled and unlabeled lipophorins, purified from R. prolixus were incubated in the presence of LTP resulting in the time-dependent transfer of phospholipids. LTP-mediated phospholipid transfer was not a selective process.  相似文献   

10.
Hemolymph lipoproteins (lipophorins) of adult Manduca sexta are disinct from larval forms in density, lipid content, composition, and the presence of a third, low molecular weight apoprotein. Generally, only one lipoprotein species exists in M. sexta hemolymph during any given life stage. Progression through the life cycle results in alterations of existing lipoproteins to produce new forms, without new protein synthesis. The observed alterations in lipoprotein density could result from facilitated lipid transfer in insect hemolymph. An in vitro assay of facilitated lipid transfer was developed which employs a high density lipophorin from the wandering larva (density = 1.18 g/ml) as acceptor and adult low density lipophorin (density = 1.03 g/ml) as donor. Adult lipophorin-deficient hemolymph was shown to catalyze a time-dependent equilibration of the starting lipoproteins to produce a new intermediate lipophorin, Lp-I. Hydrodynamic experiments on the donor, acceptor, and product lipoproteins excluded fusion as the mechanism whereby Lp-I is produced. Thus, it is concluded that Lp-I results from facilitated net lipid transfer from low to high density lipoprotein. Furthermore, experiments conducted with radioiodinated donor and radioiodinated acceptor lipoproteins demonstrated that apoprotein exchange does not occur during the lipid transfer reaction. When donor lipoprotein was labeled in the lipid moiety with carbon-14, evidence of diacylglycerol and phospholipid exchange was obtained. Partial characterization of the lipid transfer factor revealed a relationship between incubation time, donor concentration, acceptor concentration, lipophorin-deficient hemolymph concentration, and transfer activity, as measured by Lp-I production. It is concluded that lipophorin-deficient hemolymph contains one or more factor(s) that catalyze net lipid transfer as well as diacylglycerol and phospholipid exchange between lipophorins to produce a single form at equilibrium.  相似文献   

11.
Injection of heat-killed bacteria into larvae of the greater wax moth Galleria mellonella is followed by changes in lipoprotein composition in the hemolymph. Density gradient centrifugation experiments revealed that within the first four hours after injection, a part of larval lipoprotein, high-density lipophorin (HDLp), was converted into a lipoprotein of lower density. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the gradient fractions and sequencing of protein fragments, established that the exchangeable apolipoprotein apolipophorin III (apoLp-III), a potent immune-activator, was associated with this newly formed lipophorin. To investigate further the influence of lipophorin-associated apoLp-III on immune-related reactions, we performed in vitro studies with isolated hemocytes from G. mellonella and lipophorins from the sphinx moth Manduca sexta, as a natural source of high amounts of low-density lipophorin (LDLp) and HDLp. The hemocytes were activated to form superoxide radicals upon incubation with LDLp, but not with HDLp. Fluorescence-labeled LDLp was specifically taken up by granular cells. This process was inhibited by adding an excess of unlabeled LDLp, but not by HDLp. We hypothesize that larval lipophorin formed in vivo is an endogenous signal for immune activation, specifically mediated by the binding of lipid-associated apoLp-III to hemocyte membrane receptors.  相似文献   

12.
Lipids are constantly shuttled through the body to redistribute energy and metabolites between sites of absorption, storage, and catabolism in a complex homeostatic equilibrium. In Drosophila, lipids are transported through the hemolymph in the form of lipoprotein particles, known as lipophorins. The mechanisms by which cells interact with circulating lipophorins and acquire their lipidic cargo are poorly understood. We have found that lipophorin receptor 1 and 2 (lpr1 and lpr2), two partially redundant genes belonging to the Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor (LDLR) family, are essential for the efficient uptake and accumulation of neutral lipids by oocytes and cells of the imaginal discs. Females lacking the lpr2 gene lay eggs with low lipid content and have reduced fertility, revealing a central role for lpr2 in mediating Drosophila vitellogenesis. lpr1 and lpr2 are transcribed into multiple isoforms. Interestingly, only a subset of these isoforms containing a particular LDLR type A module mediate neutral lipid uptake. Expression of these isoforms induces the extracellular stabilization of lipophorins. Furthermore, our data indicate that endocytosis of the lipophorin receptors is not required to mediate the uptake of neutral lipids. These findings suggest a model where lipophorin receptors promote the extracellular lipolysis of lipophorins. This model is reminiscent of the lipolytic processing of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins that occurs at the mammalian capillary endothelium, suggesting an ancient role for LDLR-like proteins in this process.  相似文献   

13.
Adipokinetic hormone, a decapeptide isolated from the locust, stimulates mobilization of diacylglycerols from the locust fat body and loading of the lipid transport protein, lipophorin. Injection of the synthetic locust adipokinetic hormone into a sphinx moth, Manduca sexta, causes lipid loading of lipophorin. The lipophorin decreases in density from 1.11 to 1.06 g/ml, and a soluble protein from the hemolymph (apolipophorin III) associates with the lipophorin particle. Administration of intermediate doses of hormone indicates that lipophorin is converted directly to the low density form; no appreciable amounts of intermediate density particles are formed.  相似文献   

14.
A lipid transfer particle (LTP) from the hemolymph of adult male locusts, Locusta migratoria, was isolated and purified. The locust LTP exhibited its capacity to catalyze the exchange of diacylglycerol between low density lipophorin (LDLp) and high density lipophorin (HDLp). Contrary to the LTP reported for the tobacco hornworm, M. sexta, the locust LTP appeared to lack the capacity to promote net transfer of diacylglycerol to form an intermediate density lipophorin, although it seems premature to conclude the complete lack of such a capacity in locust LTP. The original concentration of LTP in hemolymph is assumed to be extremely low compared to that of lipophorin; only a catalytic amount of LTP may be present in the hemolymph (e.g., only 160 micrograms of LTP was obtained from the original hemolymph containing 400 mg protein). The molecular weight of intact LTP was estimated to be about 600,000 and the LTP was comprised of three glycosylated apoproteins, apoLTP-I (mol wt 310K), apoLTP-II (mol wt 89K), and apoLTP-III (mol wt 68K). The locust LTP contained significant amounts of lipids; the total lipid content amounted to 14.4% and the lipids were comprised of 17% hydrocarbons, 44% diacylglycerol, 8% cholesterol, 13% free fatty acid, and 18% phospholipids. The above molecular properties of locust LTP are essentially similar to those reported for M. sexta LTP.  相似文献   

15.
Lipophorin of the larval honeybee, Apis mellifera L   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Most insects have a major lipoprotein species in the blood (hemolymph) that serves to transport fat from the midgut to the storage depots in fat body cells and from the fat body to peripheral tissues. The generic name lipophorin is used for this lipoprotein. In larvae of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, a lipophorin has been found with properties that correlate well with those of the only other lipophorin reported for an immature insect, that of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta. The honeybee lipophorin (Mr = 530,000) has a density of 1.13 g/ml, contains approximately 41% lipid and 59% protein, and contains two apoproteins, apoLp-I, Mr = 250,000 and apoLp-II, Mr = 80,000, both of which are glycosylated. The lipids consist predominantly of polar lipids, of which phospholipids and diacylglycerols represent 60% of the total. When the intact lipophorin is treated with trypsin, apoLp-I is rapidly proteolyzed, while apoLp-II is resistant, indicating a difference in exposure of the two apoproteins to the aqueous environment. Honeybee apoLp-II cross-reacts with antibodies to M. sexta apoLp-II, but not to anti-M. sexta apoLp-I. No cross-reactivity of honeybee apoLp-I to anti-M. sexta apoLp-I was observed.  相似文献   

16.
Four distinct subspecies of the major insect lipoprotein, lipophorin, that range in overall lipid content from 20 to 51% of the particle mass, were isolated from the hemolymph or oocytes of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta. Examination of these subspecies by electron microscopy revealed distinctive morphologies. Adult high density lipophorin (HDLp-A) was found to be an approximately spherical particle with a diameter of 15 +/- 1 nm, while HDLp-Wanderer 1 (W1), was more rectangular in shape and had a distinct cleft extending into the particle at one end. In the case of HDLp-Wanderer 2 (W2) the cleft was deeper and wider than that in HDLp-W1. In egg very high density lipophorin (VHDLp-E) the cleft was increased in size to the extent that the particle had an overall crescent-like conformation. Circular dichroism spectroscopy of the three lipophorin subspecies that contain only apolipophorin I and II revealed that only minor differences in the global protein secondary structure occur as the particle lipid content is decreased. The VHDLp-E apolipoproteins are an exception in that, while having the same alpha-helix content as HDLp-W1 and HDLp-W2, they contain less beta-structure and correspondingly more random coil. Limited digestion of the apolipoprotein components of the lipophorin subspecies with trypsin revealed that as the lipid content of the particles decreases the susceptibility of the apolipoprotein to proteolytic degradation increases. Likewise, tryptophan fluorescence quenching experiments demonstrated that the relative exposure of lipophorin apolipoprotein tryptophan residues also increases as the particle lipid content decreases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
A new type of insect lipoprotein was isolated from the hemolymph of the female cochineal insect Dactylopius confusus. The lipoprotein from the cochineal insect hemolymph was found to have a relative molecular mass of 450 000. It contains 48% lipid, mostly diacylglycerol, phospholipids and hydrocarbons. The protein moiety of the lipoprotein consists of two apoproteins of approximately 25 and 22 kDa, both of which are glycosylated. Both apolipoproteins are also found free in the hemolymph, unassociated with any lipid. Purified cochineal apolipoproteins can combine with Manduca sexta lipophorin, if injected together with adipokinetic hormone into M. sexta. This could indicate that the cochineal lipoprotein can function as a lipid shuttle similar to lipophorins of other insects, and that the cochineal insect apolipoproteins have an overall structure similar to insect apolipophorin-III.  相似文献   

18.
This work analyzed the process of lipid storage in fat body of larval Manduca sexta, focusing on the role of lipid transfer particle (LTP). Incubation of fat bodies with [(3)H]diacylglycerol-labeled lipophorin resulted in a significant accumulation of diacylglycerol (DAG) and triacylglycerol (TAG) in the tissue. Transfer of DAG to fat body and its storage as TAG was significantly inhibited (60%) by preincubating the tissue with anti-LTP antibody. Lipid transfer was restored to control values by adding LTP to fat body. Incubation of fat body with dual-labeled DAG lipophorin or its treatment with ammonium chloride showed that neither a membrane-bound lipoprotein lipase nor lipophorin endocytosis is a relevant pathway to transfer or to storage lipids into fat body, respectively. Treatment of fat body with suramin caused a 50% inhibition in [(3)H]DAG transfer from lipophorin. Treatment of [(3)H]DAG-labeled fat body with lipase significantly reduced the amount of [(3)H]DAG associated with the tissue, suggesting that the lipid is still on the external surface of the membrane. Whether this lipid represents irreversibly adsorbed lipophorin or a DAG lipase-sensitive pool is unknown. Nevertheless, these results indicate that the main pathway for DAG transfer from lipophorin to fat body is via LTP and receptor-mediated processes.  相似文献   

19.
In this study, we have analyzed the changes of the ovarian nutritional resources in Dipetalogaster maxima at representative days of the reproductive cycle: previtellogenesis, vitellogenesis, as well as fasting‐induced early and late atresia. As expected, the amounts of ovarian lipids, proteins, and glycogen increased significantly from previtellogenesis to vitellogenesis and then, diminished during atresia. However, lipids and protein stores found at the atretic stages were higher in comparison to those registered at previtellogenesis. Specific lipid staining of ovarian tissue sections evidenced remarkable changes in the shape, size, and distribution of lipid droplets throughout the reproductive cycle. The role of lipophorin (Lp) as a yolk protein precursor was analyzed by co‐injecting Lp‐OG (where OG is Oregon Green) and Lp‐DiI (where DiI is 1,10‐dioctadecyl‐3,3,30,30‐tetramethylindocarbocyanine) to follow the entire particle, demonstrating that both probes colocalized mainly in the yolk bodies of vitellogenic oocytes. Immunofluorescence assays also showed that Lp was associated to yolk bodies, supporting its endocytic pathway during vitellogenesis. The involvement of Lp in lipid delivery to oocytes was investigated in vivo by co‐injecting fluorescent probes to follow the fate of the entire particle (Lp‐DiI) and its lipid cargo (Lp‐Bodipy‐FA). Lp‐DiI was readily incorporated by vitellogenic oocytes and no lipoprotein uptake was observed in terminal follicles of ovaries at atretic stages. Bodipy‐FA was promptly transferred to vitellogenic oocytes and, to a much lesser extent, to previtellogenic follicles and to oocytes of ovarian tissue at atretic stages. Colocalization of Lp‐DiI and Lp‐Bodipy‐FA inside yolk bodies indicated the relevance of Lp in the buildup of lipid and protein oocyte stores during vitellogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Manduca sexta hemolymph lipid transfer particle (LTP) is a very high density lipoprotein (d = 1.23 g/ml) containing 14% lipid and 5% carbohydrate. Each of three apoprotein components, apoLTP-I (Mr approximately 320,000), apoLTP-II (Mr = 85,000), and apoLTP-III (Mr = 55,000), is glycosylated. Carbohydrate analysis revealed the presence of mannose and N-acetylglucosamine in a ratio of 4.5:1. A native Mr greater than 670,000 was determined by pore limiting gradient gel electrophoresis. Lipid analysis of LTP revealed the presence of phospholipid, diacylglycerol (DAG), free fatty acid, and triacylglycerol. Rabbit polyclonal antibodies directed against LTP were obtained. Anti-LTP serum was employed in experiments which indicated the presence of LTP in larval and adult animals and confirmed that LTP was unrelated to other M. sexta hemolymph proteins and lipoproteins. A quantitative lipid transfer assay measuring facilitated DAG exchange between isolated M. sexta lipoproteins was established. The level of LTP-catalyzed exchange of DAG increased linearly with increasing time and protein during the initial phase of the reaction. Inclusion of anti-LTP serum in the assay inhibited facilitated DAG exchange. Experiments designed to determine if the LTP holoprotein is required for transfer or if a component of LTP is the active principle were performed. Incubation of [3H]DAG labeled high density lipophorin with substrate amounts of LTP resulted in incorporation of labeled DAG into LTP. Subsequent incubation of [3H]DAG-labeled LTP with unlabeled lipophorin resulted in exchange of DAG and the appearance of labeled DAG in lipophorin. Nitrocellulose-bound LTP apoproteins did not facilitate DAG exchange, and pretreatment of LTP with detergents resulted in loss of transfer activity. Extraction of LTP lipids with ethanol/ether also resulted in loss of activity. The results suggest that the lipid component of LTP may be important in the transfer reaction.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号