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Substitution in vitro of Lecithin–Cholesterol Acyltransferase
Author(s) -
UTERMANN Gerd,
MENZEL HansJürgen,
ADLER Gido,
DIEKER Peter,
WEBER Wilfried
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1980.tb04643.x
Subject(s) - lecithin , sterol o acyltransferase , enzyme , chemistry , cholesterol , cholesteryl ester , acyltransferase , high density lipoprotein , antiserum , biochemistry , lipoprotein , in vitro , population , chromatography , enzyme assay , incubation , biology , antigen , immunology , demography , sociology
Lecithin–cholesterol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.43) was purified 15000‐fold from human plasma. The active material was homogeneous in different gel electrophoretic systems but separated into three major bands with apparent pI values of 4.28, 4.33 and 4.37 in isoelectrofocusing. The apparent M r of the enzyme is 67000 ± 2000. An antiserum prepared against the purified enzyme specifically inhibited the activity of lecithin–cholesterol acyltransferase in whole serum. Serum from a patient with familial deficiency of lecithin–cholesterol acyltransferase was substituted in vitro with the highly purified enzyme. The serum from this patient did not contain immunochemically detectable enzyme protein. Substitution of enzyme resulted in the following major changes.1 Cholesteryl ester content in serum increased by 36–89 mg/100 ml depending on the experimental conditions. The enzyme‐mediated formation of cholesteryl ester led to an increase of cholesteryl ester content in high‐density and very‐low‐density lipoproteins and in low‐density lipoproteins containing apoprotein‐B. No increase occurred in fractions containing very large flattened structures and the abnormal lipoprotein‐X and in lipoprotein‐E. Incubation of isolated fractions with lecithin‐cholesterol acyltransferase led to significant cholesterol esterification only in high‐density lipoproteins. 2 The characteristic disc‐shaped rouleaux‐forming high‐density lipoproteins of enzyme‐deficient serum disappeared. Instead a single homogeneous population of high‐density lipoproteins formed. The particles generated were spherical and had the electrophoretic properties, density (1.080 g/ml), diameter (12.5 nm) and apoprotein composition of normal high‐density lipoproteins‐2. 3 The concentration of spherical particles containing apolipoprotein E (density 1.040–1.080 g/ml) and the lamellar lipoprotein‐X‐like structures in the low‐density lipoprotein fraction were not affected by the enzyme substitution. 4 A single homogeneous population of spherical lipoprotein‐B particles of 26.5‐nm diameter occurred at density 1.029 g/ml.The data suggest that the discoidal high‐density lipoproteins are the major site of cholesteryl ester formation that apolipoprotein‐E is not involved in an undirectional transport of newly formed cholesteryl ester from high‐density lipoproteins to other lipoproteins and that lipoprotein‐X and lipoprotein‐E are not preferential substrates for the acyltransferase.

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