Identification of lipoprotein X-like particles in rat plasma following Intralipid infusion
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 57 (1) , 72-82
- https://doi.org/10.1139/o79-010
Abstract
Fasting rats were infused with 10% Intralipid for 24 h (0.33 ml/h per 100 g body wt) and the plasma lipoproteins isolated and compared with those of fed animals and animals with bile duct ligatures as controls. There was a 6- to 10-fold increase in the free cholesterol and phospholipid content of total plasma in animals infused with Intralipid or with ligated bile ducts. The changes were largely restricted to the low density lipoproteins (LDL) (density = 1.019-1.063 g/ml) where free cholesterol and phospholipid increased 30- to 60-fold compared with fed control animals. Hydroxylapatite chromatography of the LDL fractions of both Intralipid-infused and bile duct ligated animals yielded a subfraction which was rich in free cholesterol (27%), phosphatidylcholine (66%) and protein (6%); the latter was composed primarily of albumin and apo C proteins. The electrophoretic mobility and polyanionic precipitation properties of the abnormal lipoprotein were indistinguishable from those of lipoprotein X isolated from the animals with bile duct ligatures. The albumin in the abnormal lipoprotein from both groups of experimental animals was detected immunochemically only after delipidation of the lipoprotein. Twice as much of the lipoprotein X accumulated in Intralipid-infused than in the bile duct ligated animals. On rechromatography of the residual LDL other subfractions could be isolated which possessed lipid and protein proportions intermediate between those of the lipoprotein X and normal rat plasma low density lipoprotein. The activity of lecithin cholesterol acyl transferase was increased twofold in the Intralipid-infused animals when compared with control animals, but it decreased by 50% in the animals with bile duct ligatures. The unusual lipoprotein X apparently accumulates in the plasma of Intralipid-infused animals owing to incomplete clearance of the exogenous phospholipid, which mobilizes tissue cholesterol and in the form of vesicular particles serves as a lipid phase for apo C proteins. A comparable mechanism is suggested for the formation of lipoprotein X in the animals with bile duct ligature.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
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