Parks J S, Bullock B C, Rudel L L
Department of Comparative Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University Medical Center, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27103.
J Biol Chem. 1989 Feb 15;264(5):2545-51.
The size of low density lipoproteins (LDL) is strongly correlated with LDL cholesteryl ester (CE) content and coronary artery atherosclerosis in monkeys fed cholesterol and saturated fat. African green monkeys fed 11% (weight) fish oil diets have smaller LDL and less CE per LDL particle than lard-fed animals. We hypothesized that this might be due to a lower plasma lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity in fish oil-fed animals. Using recombinant particles made of egg yolk lecithin-[14C]cholesterol-apoA-I as exogenous substrate, we found no difference in plasma LCAT activity (27 versus 28 nmol CE formed per h/ml) of fish oil- versus lard-fed animals, respectively; furthermore, no diet-induced difference in immunodetectable LCAT was found. However, plasma phospholipids from fish oil-fed animals were over 4-fold enriched in n-3 fatty acids in the sn-2 position compared to those of lard-fed animals. Additionally, the proportion of n-3 fatty acid-containing CE products formed by LCAT, relative to the available n-3 fatty acid in the sn-2 position of phospholipids, was less than one-tenth of that for linoleic acid. The overall rate of LCAT-catalyzed CE formation with phospholipid substrates from fish oil-fed animals was lower (5-50%) than with phospholipid substrates from lard-fed animals. These data show that n-3 fatty acids in phospholipids are not readily utilized by LCAT for formation of CE; rather, LCAT preferentially utilizes linoleic acid for CE formation. The amount of linoleic acid in the sn-2 position of plasma phospholipids is reduced and replaced with n-3 fatty acids in fish oil-fed animals. As a result, LCAT-catalyzed plasma CE formation in vivo is likely reduced in fish oil-fed animals contributing to the decreased cholesteryl ester content and smaller size of LDL particles in the animals of this diet group.
在喂食胆固醇和饱和脂肪的猴子中,低密度脂蛋白(LDL)的大小与LDL胆固醇酯(CE)含量及冠状动脉粥样硬化密切相关。喂食11%(重量)鱼油饮食的非洲绿猴,其LDL颗粒比喂食猪油的动物更小,且每个LDL颗粒中的CE含量更少。我们推测,这可能是由于喂食鱼油的动物血浆卵磷脂胆固醇酰基转移酶(LCAT)活性较低所致。以蛋黄卵磷脂-[14C]胆固醇-载脂蛋白A-I制成的重组颗粒作为外源性底物,我们发现,喂食鱼油和猪油的动物血浆LCAT活性并无差异(分别为每小时每毫升形成27和28 nmol CE);此外,未发现饮食诱导的可免疫检测到的LCAT存在差异。然而,与喂食猪油的动物相比,喂食鱼油的动物血浆磷脂在sn-2位的n-3脂肪酸含量高出4倍以上。此外,LCAT形成的含n-3脂肪酸CE产物的比例,相对于磷脂sn-2位中可用的n-3脂肪酸而言,不到亚油酸的十分之一。与喂食猪油的动物的磷脂底物相比,喂食鱼油的动物的磷脂底物经LCAT催化形成CE的总体速率更低(低5 - 50%)。这些数据表明,磷脂中的n-3脂肪酸不易被LCAT用于CE的形成;相反,LCAT优先利用亚油酸进行CE的形成。在喂食鱼油的动物中,血浆磷脂sn-2位的亚油酸含量减少,并被n-3脂肪酸取代。因此,喂食鱼油的动物体内LCAT催化的血浆CE形成可能减少,这导致该饮食组动物的胆固醇酯含量降低,LDL颗粒尺寸减小。