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SEPARATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN SERUM CHYLOMICRONS
- Source :
- The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Publication Year :
- 1959
- Publisher :
- The Rockefeller University Press, 1959.
-
Abstract
- Chylomicrons were separated by low and high speed ultracentrifugation from lipemic sera of human subjects in the absorptive phase. The final chylomicron preparation was free from other serum components and contained a small constant amount of protein, approximately 2 per cent of the chylomicron fraction. Electrophoresis, immunochemical analysis, and absorption experiments identified the protein component as derived from a mixture of beta and alpha1 serum lipoproteins. Large aliquots of an emulsion of serum freed of chylomicrons and coconut oil were incubated at 37°C. for 2 hours and ultracentrifuged as in the preparation of chylomicrons. The fat particles now showed the presence of minute amounts of beta and alpha1 serum lipoproteins in almost the same proportion as found in chylomicrons. "Finger prints" of delipidized samples of chylomicrons and particles from serum-coconut oil emulsion gave similar, although not identical patterns. The data on "clearing factor" activity corroborated the finding that serum alpha1 lipoproteins are contained in chylomicrons and particles from serum-coconut oil emulsion. These two lipide particles, partially delipidized, were both able to activate a "clearing factor" system in vitro, a property exhibited only by intact or partially delipidized alpha1 serum lipoproteins. Clearing activity was satisfactorily determined by using an emulsion of coconut oil mixed in agar as a substrate to give an opaque gel, in which the diffusing enzyme showed its activity by areas of clearing. The results obtained by this technique were in agreement with those based on fall in optical density and non-esterified fatty acid production. Chemical analysis of serum chylomicrons showed a concentration of cholesterol and phospholipides higher than could be accounted for by the attached beta and alpha1 serum lipoproteins. On the basis of these results the assumption is made that in the blood stream small amounts of serum lipoproteins, by a process of adsorption, form a complex with the absorbed triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipides, to produce chylomicrons.
- Subjects :
- food.ingredient
Lipoproteins
Immunology
Article
Fats
chemistry.chemical_compound
food
Chylomicrons
Immunology and Allergy
Humans
Plant Oils
Triglycerides
chemistry.chemical_classification
Chromatography
Cholesterol
Coconut oil
digestive, oral, and skin physiology
Substrate (chemistry)
Fatty acid
food and beverages
Proteins
Electrophoresis
Biochemistry
chemistry
Emulsion
Coconut Oil
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Ultracentrifuge
Lipoproteins, HDL
Chylomicron
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15409538 and 00221007
- Volume :
- 109
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4e96713dc24d75b434a39947af492f5b