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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 23, 762-769, Copyright © 1982 by Lipid Research, Inc.
Composition, concentration, and size of low density lipoproteins and of subfractions of very low density lipoproteins from serum of normal men and women
Z Kuchinskiene and LA Carlson
Low density lipoprotein (LDL) and four subfractions, A, B, C, and D of very
low density lipoprotein (VLDL), characterized by the following decreasing
Sf values, greater than 400, 175-400, 100-175, and 20-100, respectively,
were isolated by density gradient preparative ultracentrifugation from
serum of normal men and women and analyzed for lipids, total protein, and
apoB. The percentage distribution of the triglycerides of VLDL on fractions
A to D were 1, 25, 30, and 45%, respectively, for both males and females.
The numbers of VLDL particles for males in fractions B to D were 5, 10, and
40 X 10(12) per ml serum, respectively. Females, who had lower VLDL
concentrations than males, had half as many particles per ml of serum. The
number of LDL particles was similar in males and females and was 10 times
that of VLDL. The relative composition of the lipoproteins changed
progressively from fraction B to D and from D to LDL. The percentage of
triglyceride and soluble proteins fell, due to loss of mass of these
constituents from the particles. The percentage of apoB and cholesteryl
esters rose; this was not due to an increase of mass but because the
particles became smaller. There were no sex differences. The numbers of
molecules per particle of the constituents showed a successive decrease
from VLDL-B to LDL for triglycerides, free cholesterol, phospholipids, and
soluble apolipoproteins, while it remained constant for apoB, as well as
for cholesteryl esters from VLDL-C to LDL. These data fit the following
hypothesis for the VLDL to LDL cascade. The large VLDL particle
successively loses molecules of triglycerides (core) and of soluble
protein, free cholesterol, and phospholipids (surface). In this process,
VLDL retains its molecules of apoB, and cholesteryl esters are lost from
large VLDL but not from medium or small-sized VLDL.

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Copyright © 1982 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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