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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The in vitro effects of prostaglandins E1 and F1alpha on the activity of
cholesteryl ester synthetase
and cholesteryl ester hydrolase activities of the pigeon aorta were examined. It was found that prostaglandin E1 markedly inhibited the cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity in the supernatant fraction and slightly inhibited the
cholesteryl ester synthetase
activity. Prostaglandin F1alpha, however, modestly stimulated the cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity both in the microsomal and in the supernatant fraction of the aorta. These observations strongly warrant further studies on the role of prostaglandins in atherogenesis.
Atherosclerosis
1977 May
PMID:Effect of prostaglandins E1 and F1alpha on the activities of cholesteryl ester synthetase and cholesteryl ester hydrolases of pigeon aorta in vitro. 1 25
A man and his three daughters had massive corneal opacities called in their home village "fish-eye disease" because of the resemblance of the eyes to those of boiled fish. The two living daughters had the same dyslipoproteinaemia, characterised by normal serum cholesterol but raised serum triglycerides, raised very-low-density lipoproteins, strikingly high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) triglycerides. LDL contained normal sized as well as abnormally large particles and a 90% reduction in the level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. Lecithin:
cholesterol acyltransferase
(LCAT) activity and the percentage of plasma cholesterol esters were normal, with excluded LCAT-deficiency. Normal electrophoretic mobility of HDL as well as other lipoprotein findings excluded Tangier disease. The clinical and laboratory abnormalities in fish-eye disease are
atherosclerosis
at old age, visual impairment, and dense corneal opacification. Fish-eye disease thus differs both clinically and in its lipoprotein abnormalities from LCAT-deficiency and Tangier disease.
...
PMID:Fish-eye disease. A new familial condition with massive corneal opacities and dyslipoproteinaemia. 9 Oct 22
This study is the first to report the effect of conjugated equine estrogens on the acitivity of
cholesteryl ester synthetase
and cholesteryl ester hydrolases in the aorta. In spontaneously
atherosclerosis
-susceptible White Carneau pigeons, estrogens significantly decreased (P less 0.01) the activity of
cholesteryl ester synthetase
and increased (P less than 0.01) the cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity in the microsomal fraction of the aorta. There was no effect on the cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity in the supernatant fraction. The inhibition of cholesteryl ester synthesis and the stimulation of cholesteryl ester hydrolase might be responsible for the decreased content of cholesteryl esters noted in pigeon aorta after estrogen treatment.
...
PMID:Effect of estrogens on the acitivities of cholesteryl ester synthetase and cholesteryl ester hydrolases in pigeon aorta. 20 Oct 55
Although unesterified cholesterol and phospholipids exchange freely, a protein factor from the d greater than 1.25 g/ml plasma fraction was found to be necessary for cholesterol esters to transfer from HDL to LDL. This transfer was reversible, time-dependent and a function of the concentration of the d greater than 1.25 fraction, but independent of lecithin :
cholesterol acyltransferase
reaction. The transfer represented an equilibration of molecules, but no net mass transfer of cholesterol esters could be demonstrated from HDL to LDL.
Atherosclerosis
1978 Nov
PMID:Cholesterol ester exchange between human plasma high and low density lipoproteins mediated by a plasma protein factor. 21 93
ML-236B, a competitive inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, significantly reduced both serum cholesterol and phospholipid levels in dogs, when used at a dosage higher than 10 mg/kg per day. Triglyceride levels were not consistently changed, but beta- and pre-beta-lipoproteins were preferentially reduced. Serum cholesterol levels were reduced by 44--45% at the higher dosage of 100--400 mg/kg per day (for 5 weeks) but ML-236B caused no significant changes in the cholesterol content of the liver and aorta and in the activities of serum GOT, GPT, CPK and lecithin :
cholesterol acyltransferase
. Fecal excretion of neutral sterols was unaffected but that of bile acids was markedly elevated by the drug. Under these conditions, hepatic cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in bile acid biosynthesis, showed no detectable changes.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Mar
PMID:Hypolipidemic effects in dogs of ML-236B, a competitive inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase. 22 90
Guinea pigs were fed a semisynthetic diet containing 10% (by weight) cottonseed oil and 1% cholesterol. In response to cholesterol/fat feeding there was an increase in both the unesterified cholesterol (UC) and cholesteryl ester (CE) of the intestinal mucosal cell. Along with the increased cholesterol levels there was a 4-fold increase in the microsomal acylCoA:
cholesterol acyltransferase
(ACAT) activity after only two days of cholesterol/fat feeding. After 6 days on the experimental diet the ACAT activity was up to 8-fold the activity of the control, and then remained at this level for up to 20 days. The increased ACAT activity was probably not due to increased substrate concentration alone, since the fractional esterification of cholesterol also increased when the cholesterol/fat containing diet was given. There was also an increase in the triglyceride content of the intestinal mucosal cells from guinea pigs on the experimental diet. The mucosal cells of the cholesterol/fat fed animals accumulated varying amounts of lipid droplets, which were without an enveloping membrane, suggesting that the uptake of lipids from the intestinal lumen was higher than the capacity to synthesize and/or secrete lipoproteins. Simultaneously the size and amount of secondary lysosomes increased. A considerable increase in lipid droplets, lipolysosomes, and residual bodies was observed in the lamina propria macrophages while no crystalline clefts were seen.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Nov
PMID:Influence of cholesterol/fat feeding on cholesterol esterification and morphological structures in intestinal mucosa from guinea pigs. 51 36
Lecithin:
cholesterol acyltransferase
(LCAT) activity, lipid concentration, lipoprotein lipid concentrations and cholesteryl ester linoleic acid proportion were determined in the plasma of 85 subjects randomly selected from a population during a health screen survey. Mean fractional LCAT rate was significantly higher in men than in women. Molar LCAT rate correlated with low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentration in men and with nearly all lipoprotein lipid concentrations in women. Most of these relationships were dependent on plasma unesterified cholesterol (UC) concentration. Fractional LCAT rate was correlated only with HDL cholesterol concentration in women and this relation was dependent on the influence of obesity. An inverse relationship between plasma cholesteryl ester (PCE) linoleic acid proportion and molar LCAT rate in women was also explained by influences of obesity on the data. Both fractional and molar LCAT rates were positively correlated with obesity (Quetelet's Index and subscapular skinfold thickness) in women but not in men. This study showed the influence of sex on nearly all correlations involving LCAT activity in combined groups of men and women.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Nov
PMID:Lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity, plasma and lipoprotein lipids and obesity in men and women. 51 42
Serum lipoproteins, separated by preparative ultracentrifugation and the activity of the plasma enzyme lecithin:
cholesterol acyltransferase
(LCAT) have been measured in insulin-dependent diabetics, non-insulin-dependent diabetics and in age-matched non-diabetic controls. In the insulin-dependent diabetics, mean total serum cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) concentrations were significantly higher than in controls. Non-insulin-dependent diabetics had significantly raised total triglycerides and cholesterol, but HDL-C levels were essentially normal. The increased low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) in both diabetic groups was statistically significant in men. A methodological study of HDL separation techniques was carried out to facilitate interpretation of these findings. Mean LCAT activity, by a method reflecting combined enzyme and substrate effects was significantly increased in these diabetic groups. The results confirm recent reports of a raised HDL-C in those insulin-dependent diabetics who are prone to coronary heart disease.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Dec
PMID:Lipoproteins and plasma cholesterol esterification in normal and diabetic subjects. 51 47
A study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that an abnormally high concentration of
acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase
in atherosclerotic microsomes is partly responsible for augmented esterification of cholesterol. We approached the problem indirectly by measuring the incorporation of radioactivity into cholesteryl ester from [1-14C]palmityl-CoA in normal microsomes after enrichment of their concentration of microsomal free cholesterol to levels characteristic of atherosclerotic microsomes. Elevation of free cholesterol content induced increased cholesterol esterification approximately linearly over the range studied. The cholesterol-esterifying activity of atherosclerotic microsomes was not greater than that of normal microsomes having the same concentration of cholesterol. The results suggest that, with acyl-CoA constant, augmented cholesterol esterification in atherosclerotic microsomes is an effect of high microsomal cholesterol concentrations and not due to an increase in the concentration of the enzyme.
Atherosclerosis
1977 Dec
PMID:Studies of the mechanism of augmented synthesis of cholesteryl ester in atherosclerotic rabbit aortic microsomes. 59 52
Guinea pigs were fed a semisynthetic diet containing 10% (by weight) cottonseed oil with or without 1% cholesterol. In response to cholesterol/fat feeding there was a significant accumulation of cholesteryl ester (CE), particularly in the liver, but also in the kidney, spleen and suprarenal glands. The hepatic
acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase
(
ACAT
) increased 5-10 times when the animals were fed cholesterol fat during 11 weeks while the acid cholesterol esterase (CE-ase) was similar in the two dietary groups. Intestinal lymph showed the highest content of cholesterol (both free and esterified) in guinea pigs fed cholesterol/fat. A low activity of lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) was present in the intestinal lymph, irrespective of dietary composition. Triglyceride-rich lipoproteins seem to inhibit LCAT activity in the intestinal lymph. Plasma cholesterol levels in animals fed cholesterol/fat increased markedly while LCAT remained unaffected by the diets. Activity of
ACAT
and CE-ase in kidney and spleen was low compared to liver tissue and the enzyme activities were not affected by the cholesterol/fat feeding.
Atherosclerosis
1978 Jun
PMID:Cholesteryl ester metabolism in fat- and cholesterol/fat-fed guinea pigs. 67 14
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