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Characterization of the apolipoprotein B polypeptide of human plasma low density lipoprotein in detergent and denaturation solutions.

86

Citations

34

References

1979

Year

Abstract

Apolipoprotein B, the polypeptide moiety of human serum low density lipoprotein, is subject to degradation (as evidenced by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) both in the intact particle and after delipidation. Protease inhibitors, sodium azide, and nitrogen saturation did not influence the rate or degree of degradation. Lipid-free apolipoprotein B prepared by gel exclusion chromatography in sodium dodecyl sulfate bound a limited number of detergent molecules (up to 300) in monomeric sodium dodecyl sulfate solutions; circular dichroic spectra of this complex were similar to spectra of the intact lipoprotein. Near the critical micelle concentrations, a large, cooperative increase in detergent binding occurred, accompanied by circular dichroic changes indicating increased alpha helicity. By sucrose density centrifugation, lysopalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine could be substituted for the anionic detergent; about 300 mol of lysolipid were bound to the polypeptide. Replacement of detergent with guanidine hydrochloride by dialysis produced a soluble polypeptide with no ordered structure at denaturant concentrations above 7 M. At lower guanidine hydrochloride concentrations, structural elements were regained in a broad, reversible transition. It appears that apolipoprotein B is an easily degraded polypeptide with regions resembling water-soluble proteins but other regions which interact with lipid (or synthetic amphiphiles) and produce an overall insolubility in aqueous solution in the absence of amphiphilic ligands.

References

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