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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print October 16, 2004
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Molecular Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90033
Corresponding Author: asatryan{at}usc.edu
Electronegative low density lipoprotein (LDL-) formation that structurally resembles LDL- isolated from plasma was evaluated after LDL treatment with snake venom phospholipase A2 (PLA2). PLA2 treatment of LDL increased its electrophoretic mobility in proportion to the amount of LDL- formed without evidence of lipid peroxidation. These changes dose-dependently correlated with the degree of phospholipid hydrolysis. Strong immunoreactivity of LDL- subfraction from plasma and PLA2 treated LDL (PLA2-LDL) to amyloid oligomer-specific antibody was observed. Higher
Revised on September 30, 2004
Accepted on October 5, 2004
LDL phospholipid hydrolysis produces modified electronegative particles with an unfolded apoB100 protein
-strand structural content and unfolding proportionate to the loss of
-helical structure of apoB100 of LDL- isolated from both native- and PLA2-LDLs was demonstrated by circular dichrosim (CD) spectropolarimetry. These structural changes resembled the characteristics of some oxidatively modified LDLs and soluble oligomeric aggregates of amyloidogenic proteins. PLA2-LDL was also more susceptible to nitration by peroxynitrite likely due to exposure of otherwise inaccessible hydrophilic and hydrophobic domains arising from apoB100 unfolding. This was also demonstrated for plasma LDL-. In contrast, PLA2-LDL was more resistant to copper-mediated oxidation that was reversed upon adding small amounts of unsaturated fatty acids. The observed similarities between PLA2-LDL-derived LDL- and plasma LDL- implicate a role for secretory PLA2 in producing modified electronegative LDL that is facilitated by unfolding of apoB100.
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