Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.34 (lipoprotein lipase)
7,025 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to clarify the relationship between composition and lipolytic responses to lipoprotein lipase (LPL), very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) from rats or humans were incubated with a commercially available LPL or with a partially purified LPL from postheparin human plasma and fatty acids released from VLDL were determined in vitro. VLDL from rats fed a diet containing 0.25% cholesterol for 6 months were rich in cholesterol and poor in triglycerides, and released less fatty acids from incubation with LPL than those from control rats. VLDL from normo-and hypertriglyceridemic human subjects were incubated with LPL. The fatty acid release poorly correlated with the apoprotein ratios of VLDL, apo C-III/C-II, B/E, and C/E with the exception of apo B/C, but it correlated well with the ratio of triglyceride/either one of the surface components including total apoproteins, free cholesterol and phospholipids in VLDL or the ratio of the triglyceride/total sum of the surface components. The correlation coefficients between fatty acid release and a ratio of triglyceride/total surface components were 0.774 (using the commercially available LPL) and 0.786 (using the partially purified human LPL). The fatty acid release increased after pretreatment of VLDL with phospholipase A2. The phospholipid content of VLDL was reduced without significant changes in other VLDL components. Thus, the responses of VLDL to LPL treatment may depend mainly upon the surface: core relationship of VLDL rather than its apoprotein composition except in rare clinical cases such as apo C-II deficiency.
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PMID:Composition of very low density lipoproteins and in vitro effect of lipoprotein lipase. 181 58

Fourteen male patients with Type 2 diabetes were studied to identify relationships between insulin-mediated glucose disposal, basal and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, fasting lipoproteins and apolipoproteins, and the activities of lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase. Sensitivity of glucose disposal to exogenous insulin correlated positively with HDL-cholesterol (r = 0.65, p less than 0.05), HDL2-cholesterol (r = 0.59, p less than 0.05), and apolipoprotein A1 (r = 0.57, p less than 0.05) and negatively with apolipoprotein B (r = -0.53, p less than 0.05) and total: HDL-cholesterol ratio (r = -0.68, p less than 0.01). Fasting C-peptide correlated negatively with HDL-cholesterol (r = -0.76, p less than 0.01), HDL2-cholesterol (r = -0.80, p less than 0.001) and apoprotein A1 (r = -0.56, p less than 0.05) and positively with total: HDL-cholesterol ratio (r = 0.64, p less than 0.05). Neither fasting plasma glucose nor the indices of stimulated insulin secretion (glucose-stimulated plasma insulin and C-peptide) were related to any of the lipoprotein measures. Insulin insensitivity and hyperinsulinaemia were both associated with higher levels of hepatic lipase activity but did not influence lipoprotein lipase activity. In multiple linear regression analysis, hepatic lipase activity was related to HDL-cholesterol independent of insulin insensitivity. In addition, fasting C-peptide alone accounted for 70% of the variance in hepatic lipase activity and this was independent of insulin sensitivity and body mass index. We propose that the abnormalities of HDL-cholesterol in Type 2 diabetes are closely related to enhanced hepatic lipase activity brought about by increased insulin secretion which, in turn, is secondary to the defect in insulin action.
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PMID:The role of insulin insensitivity and hepatic lipase in the dyslipidaemia of type 2 diabetes. 183 57

Compositional changes of apoproteins and lipids in lipoproteins influence their affinities for receptors and enzymes. Decrease of apo C proteins and increase of apo E in chylomicron and very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) during their catabolism might promote the binding to remnant receptor. On the other hand, the affinity for lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gradually decreases and that for hepatic lipase increases. However, the responsiveness of VLDL to LPL might be under the control of triglyceride (TG)/surface component ratios but not of the apoprotein ratios in ordinary circumstances judging from the results of the releases of fatty acids from VLDL by LPL in vitro. Responses of VLDL from diabetic patients to LPL significantly decreased compared with those from non-diabetic subjects. Glycation of VLDL in vitro impaired their responses to LPL. Therefore, delayed catabolism of VLDL in diabetes might partially depend upon glycation of VLDL besides the decreased LPL activity. Low density lipoproteins (LDL), apoproteins of which consist mostly of apo B protein and had a low TG level, showed a high affinity to the LDL receptor. However, LDL from hypertriglyceridemic subjects, in which the TG contents was increased, had a low affinity to the receptor. Since high density lipoproteins (HDL) from patients in acute phases contain a large amount of serum amyloid A protein (SAA), the percentages of apo A proteins markedly decreased. When SAA-rich HDL were incubated with leucocytes, SAA were degraded rapidly, although other apoproteins remained to be unchanged. Therefore, such HDL become unstable, and this might induce low HDL levels in the acute phase.
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PMID:[Metabolic disorders of lipoproteins--influences of compositional changes of lipoproteins upon their metabolic behavior]. 188 Sep 36

Apolipoprotein (apo) E, a major protein component of plasma lipoproteins, is a physiological ligand for the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor as well as for a specific apoE receptor; it is therefore an important modulator of lipoprotein metabolism. In this study we cloned and sequenced bovine apoE complementary DNA. Comparison of nucleotide substitution rates shows that apoE is less conservative than apoA-I and evolves about 30% faster than an average mammalian protein. Although apoE is not a conservative protein, several regions have been well conserved among all eight mammalian sequences now available. These include a 33-amino-acid block immediately upsteam from the third intron/exon junction and the LDL receptor binding region. We have also compared published apoC-I and apoC-II sequences. Both proteins are less conservative than apoE. In particular, apoC-I shows no well-conserved region except for a small region in the common 33-amino-acid block, suggesting that the function of apoC-I does not have stringent structural requirements. On the other hand, in apoC-II the region encoded by exon 4, which consists of the last 29 amino acids of the polypeptide, has been rather well conserved, probably because this region is important for the activation of lipoprotein lipase and chylomicron and very low density lipoprotein metabolism.
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PMID:Cloning and sequencing of bovine apolipoprotein E complementary DNA and molecular evolution of apolipoproteins E, C-I, and C-II. 190 18

To study the relationships between lipolytic activities and plasma lipoprotein levels in rats, three diets were given for 8 weeks: a semipurified diet (based on sucrose, casein and lard) and this diet enriched with 5% cystine or with 1% cholesterol. Both supplemented diets induced hypercholesterolemia. Lipoprotein analysis by density gradient ultracentrifugation of plasma indicated that hypercholesterolemia of cystine-fed rats (+52%) was characterized by an increased cholesterol level in high-density lipoprotein (HDL; +131%) and low-density lipoprotein 2 (LDL2; +147%), the lipoprotein fraction containing essentially apolipoprotein-E-rich high-density lipoproteins (HDL1), and was associated with a decreased cholesterol level in triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL: -69%). That obtained by cholesterol feeding (+28%) was due to a large increase in the TRL cholesterol level (+315%) whereas cholesterol was reduced in HDL (-40%) and in LDL2 (-60%). Under these dietary conditions, the activity of hepatic lipase (HL) was measured in liver homogenates and those of both HL and lipoprotein lipase were measured in plasma after heparin injection. The activity of HL (1,783 +/- 132 mU/g liver in control rats) was increased by 48% in cystine-fed rats and decreased by 40% in cholesterol-fed rats. Similar changes were observed in the activity of both lipases measured in postheparin plasma. Highly significant positive correlations linked each lipolytic activity with the level of cholesterol, phospholipids and proteins in LDL2 (HDL1-rich fraction) and in HDL. In contrast, significant negative correlations were found between all of the TRL components and the activity of the lipases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lipolytic activities in rats fed a sucrose-rich diet supplemented with either cystine or cholesterol: relationships with lipoprotein profiles. 195 17

For the past 40 years, adrenoreceptors have been studied as the biomolecular mediators of tissue response to catecholamines. An expanded role of alpha-adrenoreceptors in the regulation of risk factors for coronary heart disease (CHD) has recently emerged. Hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension, and cigarette smoking are the major risk factors and their interactions are associated with increased mortality. Control of hypertension alone has failed to reduce the risk of CHD. Conversely, reduction of elevated total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol has been shown to lower the risk of CHD. As a result, multiple risk factor approaches to the management of patients have evolved in attempts to reduce deaths from CHD. Selective alpha 1-adrenoreceptor antagonists appear to have a dual function in CHD risk management since they control elevated blood pressure by peripheral vasodilatation and reduce atherogenic lipids by several mechanisms. With selective alpha 1-blockade, the number of LDL-cholesterol receptors is up-regulated and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMG Co-A reductase) activity is suppressed causing reductions in total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, and apoprotein B levels. Effects on intermediary metabolism reduce synthesis of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) which contributes to a reduction of total triglyceride levels and, to a lesser extent, to a reduction of total cholesterol levels. Increased lipoprotein lipase activity leads to reduced total triglyceride and VLDL levels and to increased high density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol levels. As demonstrated by the initial prospective data from Phase I of the Treatment of Mild Hypertension Study (TOMHS), both reduction of raised blood pressure and beneficial lipid modifications are sustained (1 year) with selective alpha 1-blockade. The prospective benefits on morbidity and mortality from CHD of such favourable changes in these two major risk factors remain to be quantified.
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PMID:Alpha 1-adrenoreceptor blockade and the molecular basis of lipid metabolism alterations. 197 19

Dysbetalipoproteinaemia is a genetic disorder characterized by accumulation of lipoprotein remnant particles in the plasma, accelerated atherosclerosis, and the abnormal apoprotein E2. Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus can aggravate the hyperlipidaemia associated with this disorder, presumably by increasing triglyceride synthesis and reducing very low density lipoprotein catabolism by lipoprotein lipase. This report documents the gradual amelioration of dysbetalipoproteinaemia in uncontrolled diabetes mellitus following therapy with exogenous insulin alone. Although the beneficial effects of insulin therapy in this patient may include inhibition of triglyceride synthesis and improved triglyceride catabolism, we propose that insulin may also stimulate clearance of atherogenic remnant lipoprotein particles.
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PMID:Potential role of insulin in the clearance of remnant lipoproteins in dysbetalipoproteinaemia. 199 70

In a previous report (Langner, C. A., Birkenmeier, E. H., Ben-Zeev, O., Schotz, M. C., Sweet, H. O., Davisson, M. T., and Gordon, J. I. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7994-8003), we characterized the early developmental phenotype of mice that were homozygous for the autosomal recessive fatty liver dystrophy (fld) mutation. Shortly after birth, these mice can be distinguished from their +/? littermates by large pale livers, hypertriglyceridemia, elevations in hepatic apolipoprotein A-IV and apoC-II mRNA levels, and tissue-specific decreases in lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase activities. These traits resolve by the early weaning period. We have now characterized a second feature of this mutation: a peripheral neuropathy that becomes manifest by an abnormal gait at the end of the second postnatal week and persists through adulthood. Electron microscopic studies of sciatic nerves from 4-day-to 1-year-old fld/fld mice demonstrated a variety of abnormalities including thin, poorly compacted myelin sheaths, active myelin breakdown, and enlarged Schwann cell mitochondria and nuclei. Western blot analysis of sciatic nerve homogenates prepared from 1 to 3-month-old fld/fld mice and their +/? littermates indicated that homozygous animals have striking reductions in two peripheral nerve myelin-associated proteins, P0 and P2. The steady-state level of apoE, a protein induced during nerve regeneration, is markedly elevated. Furthermore, two axon-specific proteins, neurofilament 68K and growth-associated 43 protein, display altered expression in adult fld/fld sciatic nerves. High performance thin-layer chromatography revealed deficiencies in phospholipids, glycosphingolipids, and some neutral lipids in fld/fld sciatic nerves harvested during the first several months of life (compared to their +/? littermates). Cholesterol esters were elevated in homozygotes. By contrast, no differences in brain lipids were noted between fld/fld animals and their +/? littermates. These data suggest that the fld mutation is associated with an abnormality of myelin formation (dysmyelination) as well as demyelination and axonal degeneration that persists despite apparent resolution of the neonatal hypertriglyceridemia and associated lipase abnormalities. These findings establish the fld/fld mouse as an excellent model system for analyzing homeostatic mechanisms that modulate lipid metabolism in newborn mice and for examining the pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathies associated with dyslipidemias.
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PMID:Characterization of the peripheral neuropathy in neonatal and adult mice that are homozygous for the fatty liver dystrophy (fld) mutation. 205 Jun 89

Using the dynamic fluorescence quenching method, it was shown that very low density (VLDL) apoproteins (apo B, E and C) tryptophanyls exhibit a lower accessibility towards water-soluble quenchers as compared to apo B LDL chromophores. The efficiency of proteolytic degradation by trypsin of VLDL-associated apo E and apo C was much lower than that of apo B. These results may be due to the cluster arrangement of amphipatic apo E and apo C on the VLDL surface and/or to their partial shielding by apo B. Treatment of VLDL particles with sub-lytic concentrations of the detergent, Tween-20, did not change the relaxation characteristics of amphipatic apoprotein tryptophanyl microenvironment, but resulted in a reversible structural transition registered by a "red" shift of the emission spectrum maximum as well as by change of the iodine quenching pattern. The detergent-induced increase of the VLDL tryptophanyl accessibility to acrylamide and the decrease of the quenching constant at the partial and complete particle solubilization were related to a change of the apo B molecular package. Treatment of VLDL with Tween-20 or cow milk lipoprotein lipase resulted in the appearance of tryptophanyl population that was not involved in the resonance energy transfer to the lipid phase-localized fluorescent probe pyrene, which is indicative of the protein dissociation. Treatment of VLDL particles with sub-lytic concentrations of Tween-20 revealed a lower (compared to apo C) relative affinity of apo E for the VLDL lipid surface. Inhibition of the lipoprotein lipase activity by apoprotein C-III was found to be non-competitive. It was concluded that lipolysis is a self-regulatory process which involves changes in the effector apoprotein concentration on the surface of triglyceride-rich particles.
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PMID:[Dynamic behavior of apoproteins of human plasma very low density lipoproteins and lipolysis regulation]. 216 Aug 40

We studied the effects of ethinyl oestradiol on the serum concentrations and metabolism of very-low- and low-density lipoproteins (VLDL and LDL) in Watanabe heritable hyperlipidaemic (WHHL) homozygous rabbits, an animal model for familial hypercholesterolaemia. The results were compared with those in untreated homozygotes as well as in heterozygotes treated or not with ethinyl oestradiol. The gain in body weight was similar in all groups. Treatment with ethinyl oestradiol resulted in the homozygotes in an approx. 80% decrease in the concentrations of lipids and apoprotein B in the d less than 1.019 lipoprotein fraction; those in the LDL fraction did not change. In the heterozygotes, basal serum lipids and apoprotein B levels in the d less than 1.019 fraction were low; ethinyl oestradiol treatment especially affected the LDL fraction (cholesterol -84%, apoprotein B -64%). Turnover experiments with 125I-labelled VLDL revealed that, on treatment with ethinyl oestradiol, the fractional catabolic rate in homozygous rabbits increased 2-fold. The secretion rates of lipids and protein in the d less than 1.019 fraction as estimated after injection of Triton WR-1339 was not decreased. In homozygotes and heterozygotes increases in post-heparin hepatic lipase activity of 62 and 80% respectively were observed, with no changes in lipoprotein lipase activity. We conclude that ethinyl oestradiol induces in homozygous WHHL rabbits a direct removal of VLDL and VLDL remnants from the plasma, apparently due to an increase in hepatic lipase activity.
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PMID:Increased hepatic lipase activity and increased direct removal of very-low-density lipoprotein remnants in Watanabe heritable hyperlipidaemic (WHHL) rabbits treated with ethinyl oestradiol. 226 92


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