THE STABILIZATION OF SERUM LIPID EMULSIONS BY SERUM PHOSPHOLIPIDS
Open Access
- 1 November 1949
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 90 (5) , 409-424
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.90.5.409
Abstract
Clarity of high lipid sera is closely correlated with elevated proportions of serum phospholipids, and lipemia (milkiness) with low proportions of phospholipids. Clear high lipid sera occur uniquely in obstructive jaundice, both intra- and extrahepatic in origin. Destruction of the polar nature of serum "lecithin" by enzymatic hydrolysis, using Cl. welchii lecithinase, results in a degree of lipemia which is linearly proportional to total lipid content in clear or lipemic high lipid or normal lipid sera. Even in grossly lipemic sera, a significant proportion of the serum lipids is masked in particles of invisible size. Enzymatic removal of the stabilizing properties of serum "lecithin" unmasks this hitherto invisible fraction. The concentration of serum phospholipids available for complex formation with serum proteins appears to be an important factor in determining particle size of serum lipids and hence of their occurrence in serum as masked or as visible particles. The implications of these findings for studies of the genesis of atheromatosis are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physical State of Lipids and Foreign Substances Producing AtherosclerosisScience, 1948
- A Homogeneous Emulsion of Fat, Protein, and Glucose for Intravenous AdministrationScience, 1947
- A MANOMETRIC METHOD FOR MEASURING THE ACTIVITY OF THE CL. WELCHII LECITHINASE AND A DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN PROPERTIES OF THIS ENZYMEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1947
- The biochemistry of bacterial toxinsBiochemical Journal, 1941
- Studies on diffusing factorsBiochemical Journal, 1941
- SERUM LIPOIDS AND PROTEINS IN HYPOTHYROIDISM 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1939
- The composition of particles seen in normal human blood under dark‐ground illuminationThe Journal of Physiology, 1939
- The enzymic hydrolysis of lecithinBiochemical Journal, 1931