Summary: | Subjects with high plasma cholesterol levels exhibit a high production of VLDL apolipoprotein B-100 (apoB-100), suggesting that cholesterol is a mediator for VLDL production. The objective of the study was to examine whether endogenous cholesterol synthesis, reflected by the lathosterol-cholesterol ratio (L-C ratio), affects the secretory rates of different VLDL subfractions. Ten healthy subjects were studied after overnight fasting. During a 10 h primed, constant infusion of 13C-valine (15 μmol/kg/h), enrichment was determined in apoB-100 from ultracentrifugally isolated VLDL-1 and VLDL-2 by gas chromatography mass spectrometry. The synthesis rates of VLDL-1 apoB-100 and VLDL-2 apoB-100, catabolism, and transfer were estimated by compartmental analysis. Mean VLDL-1 apoB-100 pool size was 90 ± 15 mg, and mean VLDL-2 apoB-100 pool size was 111 ± 14 mg. Absolute synthesis rate of VLDL-1 apoB-100 was 649 ± 127 mg/day and 353 ± 59 mg/day for VLDL-2 apoB-100. There was a strong association between the absolute synthesis rate of VLDL-2 apoB-100 and L-C ratio (r 2 = 0.61, P < 0.01). In contrast, no correlation was observed between L-C ratio and absolute synthesis rate of VLDL-1 apoB-100 (r 2 = 0.302, P = 0.09). In conclusion, these data provide additional support for an independent regulation of VLDL-1 apoB-100 and VLDL-2 apoB-100 production.Endogenous cholesterol synthesis is correlated only with the VLDL-2 apoB-100 production.
|