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Biophys J, February 1998, p. 869-878, Vol. 74, No. 2
Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030 USA
Plasma lipoprotein surface properties are important but
poorly understood determinants of lipoprotein catabolism. To elucidate the relation between surface properties and surface reactivity, the
physical properties of surface monolayers of native lipoproteins and
lipoprotein models were investigated by fluorescent probes of surface
lipid fluidity, surface lateral diffusion, and interfacial polarity,
and by their reactivity to Naja melanoleuca
phospholipase A2 (PLA2). Native lipoproteins
were human very low, low-, and subclass 3 high-density lipoproteins
(VLDL, LDL, and HDL3); models were
1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)
or its ether analog in single-bilayer vesicles, large and small
microemulsions of POPC and triolein, and reassembled HDL
(apolipoprotein A-I plus phospholipid). Among lipoproteins, surface
lipid fluidity increased in the order HDL3 < LDL < VLDL, varying inversely with their (protein + cholesterol)/phospholipid
ratios. Models resembled VLDL in fluidity. Both lateral mobility in the
surface monolayer and polarity of the interfacial region were lower in
native lipoproteins than in models. Among native lipoproteins and
models, increased fluidity in the surface monolayer was associated with
increased reactivity to PLA2. Addition of cholesterol (up
to 20 mol%) to models had little effect on PLA2 activity,
whereas the addition of apolipoprotein C-III stimulated it.
Single-bilayer vesicles, phospholipid-triolein microemulsions, and VLDL
have surface monolayers that are quantitatively similar, and distinct
from those of LDL and HDL3. Surface property and enzymatic
reactivity differences between lipoproteins and models were associated
with differences in surface monolayer protein and cholesterol contents.
Thus differences in the surface properties that regulate lipolytic
reactivity are a predictable function of surface composition.
Biophys J, February 1998, p. 869-878, Vol. 74, No. 2
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/02/869/10 $2.00
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