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Low density lipoprotein-receptor plays a major role in the binding of very low density lipoproteins and their remnants on HepG2 cells

The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology(1999)

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摘要
The binding to HepG2 cells of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and their remnants (IDL) was alternatively, in the past, attributed to the low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLr) or to an apoE-specific receptor. In order to resolve this issue, we have compared the binding of those lipoproteins labelled with iodine-125 to normal and LDLr deficient HepG2 cells. Those deficient cells were obtained by a constitutive antisense strategy and their LDLr level is 14% the level of normal HepG2 cells. By saturation curve analysis, we show that VLDL and IDL bind to high and low affinity sites on cells. The low affinity binding was eliminated by conducting the assay in presence of a 200-fold excess of HDL3 respective to the concentrations of 125I-labelled VLDL and IDL. For 125I-VLDL high affinity binding to normal HepG2 cells, we found a dissociation constant (Kd) of 21.2±3.7 μg prot./ml (S.E., N=5) and a maximal binding capacity (Bmax) of 0.0312±0.0063 μg prot./mg cell prot, while we have measured a Kd of 5.3±0.8 and a Bmax of 0.0081±0.0014 with LDLr deficient cells. This indicates that LDLr is responsible for 74% of VLDL binding to HepG2 cells and that the non-LDLr high affinity receptor has a higher affinity for VLDL than LDLr. A 53% loss of 125I-IDL binding capacity was measured with LDLr deficient cells compared with normal cells (Bmax:0.028±0.005 versus 0.059±0.006), while no significant statistical difference was found between affinities. The study shows that the LDLr is almost the only contributor in VLDL binding, while it shares IDL binding capacity with another high affinity receptor. The physiological importance of LDLr is confirmed by an almost equivalent loss of IDL and VLDL degradation in LDLr deficient cells.
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关键词
fatty acid-binding proteins
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