A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.

Six male cynomolgus monkeys and five male African green monkeys were fed dietary cholesterol to induce hypercholesterolemia. The two groups studied had equivalent total plasma cholesterol concentrations. Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were isolated from whole plasma by ultracentrifugation and separa...

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Main Authors: C A Marzetta, L L Rudel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1988-09-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002222752038799X
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spelling doaj-4f06231d44004575bd37e9a0313e74072021-04-25T04:21:07ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751988-09-01277753762A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.C A MarzettaL L RudelSix male cynomolgus monkeys and five male African green monkeys were fed dietary cholesterol to induce hypercholesterolemia. The two groups studied had equivalent total plasma cholesterol concentrations. Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were isolated from whole plasma by ultracentrifugation and separated from other lipoprotein classes by agarose column chromatography. LDL were further subfractionated by density gradient ultracentrifugation in a VTi-50 vertical rotor. The material within five density regions was pooled from each sample and molecular weight, electrophoretic mobility, apoprotein heterogeneity, and percentage composition were determined for each subfraction. In general, cynomolgus monkey LDL were larger and more polydisperse than African green monkey LDL, and the LDL subfractions of cynomolgus monkeys were generally of lower densities although molecular weights at any density were in the same range for both species. ApoB-100 was the major apoprotein in each subfraction. ApoE was frequently present in the less dense subfractions while apoA-I was often seen in the more dense subfractions. Cynomolgus monkey LDL appeared to contain more apoE than African green monkey LDL. Over the entire spectrum of LDL, the percentage composition of the particles at any given density was indistinguishable between the species. In general, the average cynomolgus monkey LDL was larger, more polydisperse, less dense, and appeared to contain more apoE than the average African green monkey LDL. One or all of these differences might help explain the increased susceptibility to diet-induced atherosclerosis seen in cynomolgus monkeys.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002222752038799X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C A Marzetta
L L Rudel
spellingShingle C A Marzetta
L L Rudel
A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet C A Marzetta
L L Rudel
author_sort C A Marzetta
title A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
title_short A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
title_full A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
title_fullStr A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
title_full_unstemmed A species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
title_sort species comparison of low density lipoprotein heterogeneity in nonhuman primates fed atherogenic diets.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1988-09-01
description Six male cynomolgus monkeys and five male African green monkeys were fed dietary cholesterol to induce hypercholesterolemia. The two groups studied had equivalent total plasma cholesterol concentrations. Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were isolated from whole plasma by ultracentrifugation and separated from other lipoprotein classes by agarose column chromatography. LDL were further subfractionated by density gradient ultracentrifugation in a VTi-50 vertical rotor. The material within five density regions was pooled from each sample and molecular weight, electrophoretic mobility, apoprotein heterogeneity, and percentage composition were determined for each subfraction. In general, cynomolgus monkey LDL were larger and more polydisperse than African green monkey LDL, and the LDL subfractions of cynomolgus monkeys were generally of lower densities although molecular weights at any density were in the same range for both species. ApoB-100 was the major apoprotein in each subfraction. ApoE was frequently present in the less dense subfractions while apoA-I was often seen in the more dense subfractions. Cynomolgus monkey LDL appeared to contain more apoE than African green monkey LDL. Over the entire spectrum of LDL, the percentage composition of the particles at any given density was indistinguishable between the species. In general, the average cynomolgus monkey LDL was larger, more polydisperse, less dense, and appeared to contain more apoE than the average African green monkey LDL. One or all of these differences might help explain the increased susceptibility to diet-induced atherosclerosis seen in cynomolgus monkeys.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002222752038799X
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