Hernell O, Egelrud T, Olivecrona T
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1975 Feb 13;381(2):233-41.
A rabbit antiserum prepared against the serum-stimulated lipase (lipoprotein lipase) from bovine milk crossreacted with serum-stimulated lipases from human milk and from human postheparin plasma, but not with bile salt-stimulated lipase from human milk or with salt-resistant lipase from human postheparin plasma. Thus, the serum-stimulated lipase in bovine milk has immunological determinants in common with the serum-stimulated lipases in human milk and in human postheparin plasma. The time-courses for the appearance of serum-stimulated lipase and salt-resistant lipase activities in human plasma after heparin injection were different. The two activities were separated by heparin-Sepharose chromatography. After treatment of postheparin plasma with the antiserum only the salt-resistant lipase activity could be eluted from the column. Thus, these two enzyme activities in postheparin plasma reside in two different enzyme molecules.