J. Lipid Res.
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A more recent version of this article appeared on December 1, 2003

Papers In Press, published online ahead of print August 16, 2003
J. Lipid Res., doi:10.1194/jlr.M300228-JLR200
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Submitted on May 28, 2003
Revised on August 8, 2003
Accepted on August 12, 2003

Acute inflammation and infection maintain circulating phospholipid levels and enhance lipopolysaccharide binding to plasma lipoproteins

Richard L. Kitchens, Patricia A. Thompson, Robert S. Munford, and Grant E. O'Keefe

Internal Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-9113

Corresponding Author: richard.kitchens{at}UTSouthwestern.edu

Circulating lipoproteins are thought to play an important role in the detoxification of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) by binding the bioactive lipid A portion of LPS to the lipoprotein surface. It has been assumed that hypocholesterolemia contributes to inflammation during critical illness by impairing LPS neutralization. We tested whether critical illness impaired LPS binding to lipoproteins and found, to the contrary, that LPS binding was enhanced and that LPS binding to the lipoprotein classes correlated with their phospholipid content. Whereas low serum cholesterol was almost entirely due to the loss of esterified cholesterol (a lipoprotein core component), phospholipids (the major lipoprotein surface lipid) were maintained at near normal levels and were increased in a hypertriglyceridemic subset of septic patients. The levels of phospholipids found in the LDL and VLDL fractions varied inversely with those in the HDL fraction, and LPS bound predominantly to lipoproteins in the LDL and VLDL fractions when HDL levels were low. Lipoproteins isolated from the serum of septic patients neutralized the bioactivity of the LPS that had bound to them. Our results show that the host response to acute inflammation and infection tends to maintain lipoprotein phospholipid levels and that, despite hypocholesterolemia and reduced HDL levels, circulating lipoproteins maintain their ability to bind and neutralize an important bacterial agonist, LPS.


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