» Articles » PMID: 15751972

Structural Basis for Thermal Stability of Human Low-density Lipoprotein

Overview
Journal Biochemistry
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2005 Mar 9
PMID 15751972
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The stability of human low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the major cholesterol carrier in plasma, was analyzed by heating samples of different concentrations at a rate from 11 to 90 K/h. Correlation of the calorimetric, circular dichroism, fluorescence, turbidity, and electron microscopic data shows that thermal disruption of LDL involves irreversible changes in the particle morphology and protein conformation but no global protein unfolding. Heating to 85 degrees C induces LDL conversion into smaller and larger particles and apparent partial dissociation, but not unfolding, of its sole protein, apoB. Further heating leads to partial unfolding of the beta-sheets in apoB and to fusion of the protein-depleted LDL into large aggregated lipid droplets, resulting in a previously unidentified high-temperature calorimetric peak. These lipid droplets resemble in size and morphology the extracellular lipid deposits formed in the arterial wall in early atherosclerosis. The strong concentration dependence of LDL fusion revealed by near-UV/visible CD, turbidity, and calorimetry indicates high reaction order, and the heating rate dependence suggests high activation energy that arises from transient disruption of lipid and/or protein packing interactions in the course of particle fusion and apparent apoB dissociation. Consequently, thermal stability of LDL is modulated by kinetic barriers. Similar barriers may confer structural integrity to LDL subclasses in vivo.

Citing Articles

ApoB100 remodeling and stiffened cholesteryl ester core raise LDL aggregation in familial hypercholesterolemia patients.

La Chica Lhoest M, Martinez A, Garcia E, Dandurand J, Polishchuk A, Benitez-Amaro A J Lipid Res. 2024; 66(1):100703.

PMID: 39557294 PMC: 11731490. DOI: 10.1016/j.jlr.2024.100703.


Rapid Regulation of Local Temperature and Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid 1 Ion Channels with Wide-Field Plasmonic Thermal Microscopy.

Wang R, Jiang J, Zhou X, Wan Z, Zhang P, Wang S Anal Chem. 2022; 94(42):14503-14508.

PMID: 36223252 PMC: 10332261. DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c03111.


Binding to heparin triggers deleterious structural and biochemical changes in human low-density lipoprotein, which are amplified in hyperglycemia.

Jayaraman S, Chavez O, Perez A, Minambres I, Sanchez-Quesada J, Gursky O Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids. 2020; 1865(8):158712.

PMID: 32289504 PMC: 7269877. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbalip.2020.158712.


H NMR spectroscopy quantifies visibility of lipoproteins, subclasses, and lipids at varied temperatures and pressures.

Baumstark D, Kremer W, Boettcher A, Schreier C, Sander P, Schmitz G J Lipid Res. 2019; 60(9):1516-1534.

PMID: 31239285 PMC: 6718440. DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M092643.


Thermal stability of human plasma electronegative low-density lipoprotein: A paradoxical behavior of low-density lipoprotein aggregation.

Rull A, Jayaraman S, Gantz D, Rivas-Urbina A, Perez-Cuellar M, Ordonez-Llanos J Biochim Biophys Acta. 2016; 1861(9 Pt A):1015-1024.

PMID: 27233433 PMC: 5572826. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbalip.2016.05.008.