Measurement in vivo of irreversible degradation of low density lipoprotein in the rabbit aorta. Predominance of intimal degradation.
- 1 May 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc.
- Vol. 4 (3) , 214-224
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.atv.4.3.214
Abstract
The development of a highly sensitive method for assessing, tissue by tissue, the rates of irreversible protein degradation in vivo has allowed us to quantify low density lipoprotein degradation in the normal rabbit aorta and to localize it. The method depends upon the fact that tyramine-cellobiose, like sucrose used in previous studies, can be covalently attached to proteins, enter cells with them, and then remains trapped within the cell after the remainder of the protein molecule has been degraded. Rabbit LDL (d = 1.02 to d = 1.06 g/ml) was labeled with 125I-tyramine-cellobiose and injected into rabbits. Aortic 125I content 24 hours later served as a cumulative measure of degraded LDL (after appropriate corrections for any intact, nondegraded LDL present). Calculated aortic degradation of LDL averaged 9.4 X 10(-3) percent of the plasma pool per g aortic wet weight per day (n = 6). Intimal cells, obtained by gentle swabbing, accounted for fully 40% of total aortic degradation even though the intima represented less than 5% of the aortic mass. Autoradiography confirmed the high concentration of label in the intima. Degradation of unmodified and reductively methylated LDL were compared. The fractional rate of degradation of methylated LDL by the intima was 50% to 60% of that for native LDL, indicating that 40% to 50% of LDL degradation in the intima, predominantly endothelial cells, is mediated by LDL receptors.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparison of cholesteryl ester transfer from chylomicrons and other plasma lipoproteins to aortic intima media of cholesterol-fed rabbits.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1982
- Tissue sites of catabolism of rat and human low density lipoproteins in ratsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1982
- Arterial influx of esterified cholesterol from two plasma lipoprotein fractions and its hydrolysis in vtvo in hype rcholesterolemic rabbitsAtherosclerosis, 1981
- Transfer of plasma lipoprotein components and of plasma proteins into aortas of cholesterol-fed rabbits. Molecular size as a determinant of plasma lipoprotein influx.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1981
- Atherogenesis: a postprandial phenomenon.Circulation, 1979
- Characterization of low density lipoprotein-like particle in the human aorta from grossly normal and atherosclerotic regionsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1979
- The distribution of labeled low-density lipoproteins across the rabbit thoracic aorta in vivoAtherosclerosis, 1977
- The distribution of radio-iodinated serum albumin and low-density lipoprotein in tissues and the arterial wallAtherosclerosis, 1970
- Lipoprotein Movement through Canine Aortic WailScience, 1963