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Analysis of Lipoprotein Diene Formation in Human Serum Exposed to Copper

83

Citations

23

References

1993

Year

Abstract

The susceptibility of low density lipoprotein (LDL) to oxidative modification can be determined by analyzing the lag phase for initiation of diene formation in isolated LDL exposed to Cu2+. However, the applicability of this assay for clinical studies is limited by the requirement of a preparative ultracentrifugation of LDL and that the influence of water soluble antioxidants and other lipoproteins is not accounted for. The present paper describes a modification of this assay allowing determination of lag phase for lipoprotein diene formation in serum. The formation of dienes in serum exposed to Cu2+ begins following the consumption of serum alpha-tocopherol, correlates to the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (r = 0.987, n = 8), is inhibited by the addition of ascorbic acid and is absent in lipoprotein-deficient serum. It is also accompanied by an increased mobility of serum lipoproteins on agarose gel electrophoresis and with an ability of serum to displace isolated copper-oxidized LDL from binding sites mediating degradation in mouse peritoneal macrophages. The coefficient of variance of the analysis is below 3%. It is concluded that this technique allows analysis of lipoprotein oxidation susceptibility in serum samples and may prove to be useful in clinical analysis of the lipoprotein oxidation susceptibility.

References

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