INTERACTION OF SIZE-FRACTIONATED HEPARINS WITH LIPOPROTEIN-LIPASE AND HEPATIC LIPASE IN THE RAT

被引:27
|
作者
LIU, GQ
HULTIN, M
OSTERGAARD, P
OLIVECRONA, T
机构
[1] UMEA UNIV,DEPT MED BIOCHEM & BIOPHYS,S-90187 UMEA,SWEDEN
[2] NOVO NORDISK AS,HEPARIN RES LAB,GENTOFTE,DENMARK
关键词
D O I
10.1042/bj2850731
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Heparin and heparin partially depolymerized by enzymic digestion were separated into six size fractions. Hep 1 (tetrasaccharides), with a mean M(r) of 1200, did not release significant amounts of either lipoprotein lipase (LPL) or hepatic lipase (HL) on intravenous injection into rats. Hep 2 (mainly octa- and deca-saccharides), with a mean M(r) of 2400-3000, released both lipases. To evoke the same plasma activity of LPL and HL required about 10 times more by weight, or about 40 times more molecules, of this heparin than of hep 5 (mean M(r) 12 000, similar to conventional heparin). Hep 5 impeded binding and degradation of I-125-labelled bovine LPL by perfused rat livers. In contrast, hep 2 had no detectable effect on these processes. This demonstrates a difference between the sites in the liver that mediate binding, uptake and degradation of LPL, and the extrahepatic sites that bind functional LPL, and the hepatic sites that bind functional HL. After injection of 3.25 mg of hep 5/kg body weight, plasma LPL activity rapidly rose and then remained high for at least 1 h. With hep 2, plasma LPL also rose rapidly, but then decreased to almost basal by 1 h. When a labelled triacylglycerol emulsion was injected 1 h after the heparins, the fractional catabolic rate was enhanced in the rats that had received conventional heparin, as expected from the high plasma LPL activity, but decreased compared with controls in rats that had received hep 2, indicating that available LPL had been depleted through enhanced transport to and uptake in the liver.
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页码:731 / 736
页数:6
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