Publication | Open Access
The role of apolipophorin III in in vivo lipoprotein interconversions in adult Manduca sexta.
102
Citations
18
References
1987
Year
Sustained flight in the moth, Manduca sexta, necessitates lipid mobilization and transport to flight muscle, a process mediated by the adipokinetic hormone. An adult specific high density lipophorin (lipoprotein, HDLp-A, Mr = 7.68 X 10(5)) accepts diacylglycerol from the fat body, increasing in size and decreasing in density, to give a low density lipophorin (lipoprotein, LDLp, Mr = 1.56 X 10(6)). During this process, several molecules of the small apolipoprotein, apolipophorin III (apoLp-III), are added to the two molecules originally present in HDLp-A. A study of the time course of adipokinetic hormone-induced loading of diacylglycerol onto HDLp-A, using the analytical ultracentrifuge and gel filtration, suggests that a lipoprotein of density intermediate between HDLp-A and LDLp was formed transiently. Analysis of lipoproteins separated by density gradient ultracentrifugation in the course of the loading process indicates that apoLp-III is added more rapidly than diacylglycerol and that it changes its conformation on the surface as more diacylglycerol is added. Taken together with the known properties of apoLp-III, a prolate ellipsoid with an axial ratio of 3, we suggest that initially apoLp-III adds to the expanded hydrophobic surface of the lipoprotein with its short axis parallel to the surface and that apoLp-III subsequently unfolds to cover a greater area of hydrophobic surface. Exchange experiments with labeled apoLp-III showed that the two apoLp-III molecules in HDLp-A do not exchange with free apoLp-III, even when the lipoprotein passed through a loading and unloading cycle, suggesting a structural role for apoLp-III in HDLp-A.
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